Lisa Owen interviews Tim Groser & Stephen Jacobi
Lisa Owen interviews Trade Minister Tim Groser & International Business Forum's Stephen Jacobi
Tim Groser: Today’s vote against
fast-track authority by Democrats in the United States is a
“rock in the road” that puts the Trans Pacific
Partnership at risk. If the House of Representatives
can’t negotiate around that next week “we will not do
TPP any time soon. It’s as simple as that. . And that will
be a major opportunity lost for New Zealand”. If
that’s the case, Groser says negotiations will be on hold
until late 2017; “Well, according to the negative view,
it's not going to happen in the next two years”. Says it’s a “very strange situation” that Congress
could be opting out of a deal, “leaving the United States
high and dry on the beach” “…the United
States, unfortunately, is in a position where the lack of
support for a pro-trade agenda could see them watching as
bystanders. I mean, it's an unbelievable situation.” Says the problem is the “extreme weak support” for
trade deals within the Democratic Party International trade expert Stephen Jacobi says on TPP:
“You could say the ship's taking water but it's not yet on
the rocks”; with “a lot of fancy footwork” a vote may
yet pass next week.
Lisa Owen: Now,
we're starting this morning with breaking news out of the
United States. Barack Obama has failed to win fast-track
approval for the Trans-Pacific Partnership — a blow that
could scupper plans for the world's biggest-ever trade deal.
Now, Democrats voted against their own president, and
without fast-track, other countries, such as Japan, have
said hopes for a deal are slim. Supporters are hoping for a
reverse and another vote next week. But the Greens’ Russel
Norman told us this morning that the deal is in real
trouble. Former diplomat Stephen Jacobi is the executive
director of the International Business Forum and has been
close to the negotiations. Good
morning.
Stephen Jacobi: Good
morning.
How big a blow is this to the trade
deal?
Jacobi: Well, this is a setback on the
US side of the equation. Of course, it's not the end of the
story. I think you could say the ship's taking water but
it's not yet on the rocks.
Yeah, when you say
it's not the end of the story, there are still options,
aren't there, because there was this second vote that
basically keeps it on life support for another vote next
week. Do you think there is actually hope that Obama can
turn that around?
Jacobi: Yes, I think that
the important thing to remember is that the fast-track
legislation itself was actually passed, and it's a
supporting piece of legislation around assistance for
workers and companies that is in doubt. And I think there
are procedural things that can be done next week to try to
get this whole package through, but it's going to take a lot
of fancy footwork on the part of the leadership of the House
of Representatives.
OK, well, we're actually
being joined by Tim Groser now who's live on the phone. Mr
Groser, how much is a blow of a blow is
this?
Tim Groser: Well, I think it depends
on whether they can find a procedural fix, and you'd have to
be a world expert on congressional procedures, which I'm
decidedly not, to try and make an assessment of their
chances. All we know, and I agree with Stephen's analysis,
is that there will be massive efforts made by the White
House and congressional leadership to try and pull this
together. But the fundamental problem is that there is
extreme weak support inside the US Democratic Party for
trade, and whether or not there is a procedural way round
this, that's the rock in the road.
If there
isn't, what happens, if you can't get around that rock in
the road?
Groser: Assume they can't get
around the rock in the road, obviously, we're not going to
sign off on this until we know what the answer to that is.
But let's assume for the sake of the discussion that's the
case, well, we will not do TPP any time soon. It's as simple
as that. And that will be a major opportunity lost for New
Zealand, unfortunately, if that proves to be the
case.
Well, you say any time soon, but any
time at all?
Groser: That would remain to
be seen. I'm quite pessimistic, personally, about the
timetable in that negative scenario. You could rule out any
possibility of the negotiation taking place, at least
according to my analysis, prior to the presidential election
at the end of 2016. You then start 2017. The President has a
long period of time before he or she puts in place their key
appointments, cos nothing can happen until that's done. You
know, I don't think you'd be looking at starting a
re-negotiation again until late 2017. That's my
analysis.
Well, given the pessimism you're
expressing there, this could be it. It could be sunk,
couldn't it?
Groser: Well, according to the
negative view, it's not going to happen in the next two
years. Whether it happens beyond that time, that's more
speculative. The basic point is this: the United States,
unfortunately, is in a position where the lack of support
for a pro-trade agenda could see them watching as
bystanders. I mean, it's an unbelievable situation. And
there is a parallel we've just seen on this new Chinese-led
Asian infrastructure investment bank where, again, the
Chinese, growing in power, come along to the United States
and say, 'We want more say in the World Bank and the IMF,'
and then to cut it to simple terms, the Congress stops the
quota expansion that would be necessary to do this. So what
do the Chinese do? They set up their own institution, so the
United States... And then first New Zealand, it was the
first OECD country to say, 'We will go with this new bank,'
and then later the Brits, the Germans, the other big Euros
join, leaving the United States high and dry on the beach.
So, I mean, this is not a theoretical issue here, and it's a
very strange situation for the world's number-one economy,
but that's the sort of calculation... By the way, what I'm
saying is understood by a lot of people in the US Congress,
cos I know cos I've talked to them, but not enough of
them.
All right. I want to bring Stephen
Jacobi back in the conversation here. The Minister is
expressing pessimistic view on whether it's possible to get
this deal up, saying not in the next two years if it
continues... if this is the end of the road for fast-track.
I'm wondering, do you agree with
that?
Jacobi: Well, certainly, I think if
fast-track can't be got through, then the outlook for a
successful conclusion to the TPP is very much in doubt. The
Minister is quite right in that. Clearly, we think, and we
hope, there are things that can be done in the interim to
get it back on track, and we encourage everybody to put
efforts to that end.
So where do we go from
here, then?
Jacobi: Well, I think we have
to wait and see what happens over the next few days. The
reality is that there are smart minds in Washington being
applied to this at the present time. It's a huge repudiation
for President Obama, of course. It has all sorts of
implications for the continuation of his presidency. These
are very high stake games, so we have to hope that some way
will be found around this. If that can be found, then
negotiators can get back together and we can do what is
necessary to complete this negotiation. If it can't, then
it's back to the drawing board looking for other ways to
promote the idea of better rules for trade and investment in
the Asia-Pacific region and growth and jobs back
home.
All right. We're going to have to leave
it there. Thank you very much for joining me this morning,
Stephen Jacobi. And thanks very much to Tim Groser for
joining me — the Trade Minister from down the line, on the
phone. Thank you so
much.
ENDS