EU pushes to approve Japan trade deal, mindful of Canada near-miss

By Reuters   April 17, 2018 | 05:23 pm PT
EU pushes to approve Japan trade deal, mindful of Canada near-miss
Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe answers a question during an upper house parliamentary session in Tokyo, Japan, March 28, 2018. Photo by Reuters/Issei Kato
The agreement would remove some E.U. tariffs on Japan.

The European Commission will put forward a proposed free-trade agreement with Japan for fast-track approval on Wednesday, hoping to avoid a repeat of the public protests that nearly derailed a trade pact with Canada two years ago.

The European Union and Japan concluded negotiations to create the world’s largest economic area in December, signaling their rejection of the protectionist stance of U.S. President Donald Trump. Now they want to see it go into force.

The agreement would remove E.U. tariffs of 10 percent on Japanese cars and the 3 percent rate for most car parts. It would also scrap Japanese duties of some 30 percent on E.U. cheese and 15 percent on wines, and secure access to large public tenders in Japan.

The commission, which negotiates trade agreements for the E.U., will present its proposals to the 28 E.U. members, along with another planned trade agreement with Singapore. E.U. countries, the European Parliament, and the Japanese parliament will have to give their assent before the trade pact can start.

The E.U. is mindful of protests against and criticism of the E.U.-Canada Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) in 2016, which culminated in a region of Belgium threatening to destroy the deal. It provisionally entered force last September.

Both Brussels and Tokyo want to ensure the agreement can enter force early in 2019, ideally before Britain leaves the E.U. at the end of March. If it does, it could apply automatically to Britain during a transition period until the end of 2020. Otherwise, it might not.

Many of Japan’s carmakers serve the E.U. from British bases, and it has said having a deal in force during the transition would buy it more time to establish a separate trade agreement with Britain.

One reason the Japan deal may get rapid approval is that it does not deal with investment protection, which critics say allows multinational companies to influence public policy with the threat of legal action.

The agreement could then enter force after approval by the national governments and the European Parliament, rather than also having to secure clearance from national and even regional parliaments.

In fact, E.U. and Japanese negotiators have not agreed on the way in which foreign investors should be protected.

 
 
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