Abe, Trudeau extol Pacific trade pact without U.S.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, left, and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hold a joint press conference in Ottawa on Sunday. Photo: Patrick Doyle/The Canadian Press via AP

OTTAWA, Apr 29, 2019, AFP. Canadian and Japanese leaders on Sunday jointly trumpeted a rebooted Pacific trade pact that came into effect at the start of the year, without the United States. The Trans-Pacific Partnership (or CPTPP) removed trade barriers among 11 nations representing nearly 500 million consumers in the Asia-Pacific region in a bid to counter China’s growing economic influence, reported the Japan Today.

U.S. President Donald Trump withdrew from it in 2017 before it was ratified.

At a joint press conference in Ottawa, visiting Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his host Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the pact has “benefited tremendously” citizens and businesses of member nations, including Canada and Japan.

“Continuing to move forward on freer and more open trade according to the rules that we can all agree on is something that we need more in the world,” Trudeau said.

The CPTPP “stands in stark contrast” to rising protectionism sparked by the United States, he said, noting that Canadian beef exports to Japan have tripled in recent months “while the Americans do not have that kind of access.”

“I think that — concretely and tangibly — is a contrast that highlights the benefits of countries working together and not falling back on protectionism as a way of growing our economy,” he said.

His comments were echoed by Abe, who said it “should be a model going forward.” Canada and Japan would seek to grow membership in the CPTPP, he added.

In the meantime, Abe said his countrymen were enjoying more “high quality Canadian products” under the pact. “And vice-versa I have high hopes for further expansion of the export of Japanese high quality products to the Canadian market.”

Canada reached a deal last year with the United States and Mexico on a new continental trade pact, while talks between Japan and the United States to carve out a trade deal continue.

Abe’s visit to Canada came after he traveled to Washington to play golf with Trump, and to Europe where he urged British and EU lawmakers to avoid a no-deal Brexit.

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