New Zealand PM open to China involvement in TPP alternative
BUSINESS
By Deng Junfang

2017-01-23 20:24 GMT+8

New Zealand Prime Minister Bill English said on Monday that his country is working on a "Plan B" to the 12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade deal and added that China's involvement is possible.
US President Donald Trump's decision to withdraw from the still-unratified TPP would not necessarily stop the other 11 nations working on a modified version of the deal, English told Radio New Zealand.
New Zealand Prime Minister Bill English. /CFP Photo
English said the Trump administration's "America first" trade policy was "not in our interests and we would argue it's not in America's interests in the long run either, but they've made a pretty clear policy decision."
"So we're working on Plan B. It was promising that last week the prime minister of Japan, when he was in Australia, made quite a positive statement about trying to proceed with a version of the TPP without the US in it, if it comes to that," said English.
An upper house special committee passes a bill to ratify the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade pact in Tokyo, Japan, on December 9, 2016. /CFP Photo
"We don't believe it is dead, but Plan B could be a bit tricky."
Asked if it was possible the TPP could be scrapped and replaced with something else, possibly involving China, English said: "That's possible."
"There are other vehicles for China if they've got an interest in free trade in the Asia Pacific, but the TPP's a fairly original, a fairly unique kind of trade agreement and there are real benefits in it for New Zealand if we can just get everybody organized," said English.
Trade ministers and officials from the 12 Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) member nations are seen at the signing ceremony in Auckland, New Zealand, on February 4, 2016. /CFP Photo
New Zealand Trade Minister Todd McClay would probably visit Washington "before too long", English said, and begin talks with his counterparts in other TPP countries over the next couple of months about an alternative to the current agreement.
New Zealand passed legislation late last year allowing the government to ratify the agreement, which was signed in Auckland in February last year.
(Source: Xinhua)

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