Pacific Rim nations close in on a landmark trade deal

Pacific Rim nations close in on a landmark trade deal
Updated 03 October 2015
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Pacific Rim nations close in on a landmark trade deal

Pacific Rim nations close in on a landmark trade deal

ATLANTA: Pacific trade ministers are optimistic of closing a sweeping Pacific Rim trade deal after recent progress on hurdles involving autos, dairy products and intellectual property protections for expensive biologic drugs.
Ministers represented in the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) talks in Atlanta met for 20 minutes before breaking for negotiators to resume work on specific issues, work that Japan’s Economy Minister Akira Amari said on Friday would likely go on all night.
The US and Australia are locked in intense negotiations over the length of time pharmaceutical companies have exclusive rights to produce and market next-generation medicines.
Australia is one of a group of half a dozen countries resisting a US push to set a standard of eight years protection and see five years as a red line.
Amari said talks on the issue of biologic drugs “were centered on the US and Australia” and that negotiators were “putting their heads together” to try to find an agreement.
On the third day of talks, major progress had been made on another key sticking point, the auto trade involving Japan, Canada, the US and Mexico, Amari said, noting countries were “one step away from completion.”
He said that Mexico, Canada and Japan had neared terms of a deal on increased dairy market access and that the remaining issues involved New Zealand and the US.
New Zealand, which has 17 percent of global dairy trade, making it the largest exporter, has been pushing for improved access for its exports as part of the TPP.
But the US is unwilling to allow in more imports unless its farmers in turn secure better access for exports in Canada and Japan.
“I think the remaining issues are between New Zealand and the US,” Amari said of the talks involving dairy trade.
Negotiators hope to wrap up Trans-Pacific Partnership talks soon.
Mexican Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo joked that he was confident enough to bet money on wrapping up the deal, which would establish a free trade zone covering 40 percent of the world economy, on Saturday.
“I think that the dynamics are very positive,” he said.