South Africa and the other BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India and China) nations need jobs, growth and greater competitiveness. Europe needs jobs, growth and greater competitiveness. The US too, needs much the same. Better trading terms are key to securing these goals for businesses and consumers. The World Trade Organisation plays a key role in the adjudication of multilateral trade agreements and their implementation and enforcement, but it has not been as dynamic in recent years — with the failure so far of the Doha Round — in the negotiation of major multilateral deals. It secured the Bali trade facilitation deal recently with helpful Customs progress, but even that was a somewhat tortuous process. Bilateral, pluri-lateral and issue-specific deals are, therefore, filling the negotiations void left by the WTO. They are aimed at driving progress and helping to prevent any nascent protectionism. The EU and US have both concluded deals with Korea. And the EU with Canada and with Singapore and, on goods for example, with the East African Community. The EU has embarked on a major bilateral programme with the US Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) — a potentially landmark agreement, going beyond tariffs into the depth of regulatory coherence and convergence, Japan, some ASEAN and Latin American nations, and potentially India. It has also started an investment agreement dialogue with China, and is now looking to overhaul its free trade deal with Mexico. The US has done likewise, including its flagship Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) with 12 nations including...
Bilateral, issue specific deals good approach in reviving global trade
Posted on: June 8, 2015
Posted on: June 8, 2015