Outline of TPP Agreement
OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES TRADE
REPRESENTATIVE
EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE
PRESIDENT
WASHINGTON, D.C.
________________________________________
________________________________________
ENHANCING TRADE AND INVESTMENT,
SUPPORTING JOBS,
ECONOMIC GROWTH AND
DEVELOPMENT:
OUTLINES OF THE
TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT
On November 12, 2011, the Leaders of the nine Trans-Pacific Partnership countries – Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Chile, Malaysia, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, Vietnam, and the United States – announced the achievement of the broad outlines of an ambitious, 21st-century Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement that will enhance trade and investment among the TPP partner countries, promote innovation, economic growth and development, and support the creation and retention of jobs.
The agreement’s broad framework is as follows:
Key Features
In reporting to Leaders on the achievement of
the broad outlines of an agreement, the Trade Ministers
identified five defining features that will make TPP a
landmark, 21st-century trade agreement, setting a new
standard for global trade and incorporating next-generation
issues that will boost the competitiveness of TPP countries
in the global economy.
o Comprehensive market
access: to eliminate tariffs and other barriers to goods and
services trade and investment, so as to create new
opportunities for our workers and businesses and immediate
benefits for our consumers.
o Fully regional
agreement: to facilitate the development of production and
supply chains among TPP members, supporting our goal of
creating jobs, raising living standards, improving welfare
and promoting sustainable growth in our countries.
o Cross-cutting trade issues: to build on work being
done in APEC and other fora by incorporating in TPP four
new, cross-cutting issues. These are:
-
Regulatory coherence. Commitments will promote trade
between the countries by making trade among them more
seamless and efficient.
- Competitiveness and
Business Facilitation. Commitments will enhance the
domestic and regional competitiveness of each TPP
country’s economy and promote economic integration and
jobs in the region, including through the development of
regional production and supply chains.
-
Small- and Medium-Sized Enterprises Commitments will
address concerns small- and medium-sized enterprises have
raised about the difficulty in understanding and using trade
agreements, encouraging small- and medium-sized enterprises
to trade internationally.
- Development.
Comprehensive and robust market liberalization, improvements
in trade and investment enhancing disciplines, and other
commitments, including a mechanism to help all TPP countries
to effectively implement the Agreement and fully realize its
benefits, will serve to strengthen institutions important
for economic development and governance and thereby
contribute significantly to advancing TPP countries’
respective economic development priorities.
o New trade
challenges: to promote trade and investment in innovative
products and services, including related to the digital
economy and green technologies, and to ensure a competitive
business environment across the TPP region.
o Living
agreement: to enable the updating of the agreement as
appropriate to address trade issues that emerge in the
future as well as new issues that arise with the expansion
of the agreement to include new countries.
Scope
• The agreement
is being negotiated as a single undertaking that covers all
key trade and trade-related areas. In addition to updating
traditional approaches to issues covered by previous free
trade agreements (FTAs), the TPP includes new and emerging
trade issues and cross-cutting issues.
• More
than twenty negotiating groups have met over nine rounds to
develop the legal texts of the agreement and the specific
market access commitments the TPP countries will make to
open their markets to each others’ goods, services, and
government procurement.
• All
of the nine countries also have agreed to adopt high
standards in order to ensure that the benefits and
obligations of the agreement are fully shared. They also
have agreed on the need to appropriately address
sensitivities and the unique challenges faced by developing
country members, including through trade capacity building,
technical assistance, and staging of commitments as
appropriate.
• A set of new,
cross-cutting commitments are intended to reduce costs,
enable the development of a more seamless trade flows and
trade networks between TPP members, encourage the
participation of small- and medium-sized enterprises in
international trade, and promote economic growth and higher
living standards.
• The
negotiating teams have proposed new commitments on
cross-cutting issues in traditional chapters and also have
made substantial progress toward agreement on separate,
stand-alone commitments to address these issues.
Legal Texts
• The negotiating groups have developed consolidated
legal text in virtually all negotiating groups. In some
areas, text is almost complete; in others, further work is
needed to finalize text on specific issues. The texts
contain brackets to indicate where differences remain.
• The legal texts will cover
all aspects of commercial relations among the TPP countries.
The following are the issues under negotiation and a summary
of progress.
o Competition. The competition text
will promote a competitive business environment, protect
consumers, and ensure a level playing field for TPP
companies. Negotiators have made significant progress on
the text, which includes commitments on the establishment
and maintenance of competition laws and authorities,
procedural fairness in competition law enforcement,
transparency, consumer protection, private rights of action
and technical cooperation.
o Cooperation and Capacity Building. The TPP countries agree that capacity building and other forms of cooperation are critical both during the negotiations and post-conclusion to support TPP countries’ ability to implement and take advantage of the agreement. They recognize that capacity building activities can be an effective tool in helping to address specific needs of developing countries in meeting the high standards the TPP countries have agreed to seek. In this spirit, several cooperation and capacity building activities have already been implemented in response to specific requests and additional activities are being planned to assist developing countries in achieving the objectives of the agreement. The TPP countries also are discussing specific text that will establish a demand-driven and flexible institutional mechanism to effectively facilitate and cooperation and capacity building assistance after the TPP is implemented.
o Cross-Border Services. TPP countries have agreed on most of the core elements of the cross-border services text This consensus provides the basis for securing fair, open, and transparent markets for services trade, including services supplied electronically and by small- and medium-sized enterprises, while preserving the right of governments to regulate in the public interest.
o Customs. TPP negotiators have reached agreement on key elements of the customs text as well as on the fundamental importance of establishing customs procedures that are predictable, transparent and that expedite and facilitate trade, which will help link TPP firms into regional production and supply chains. The text will ensure that goods are released from customs control as quickly as possible, while preserving the ability of customs authorities to strictly enforce customs laws and regulations. TPP countries also have agreed on the importance of close cooperation between authorities to ensure the effective implementation and operation of the agreement as well as other customs matters.
o E-Commerce. The e-commerce text will enhance the viability of the digital economy by ensuring that impediments to both consumer and businesses embracing this medium of trade are addressed. Negotiators have made encouraging progress, including on provisions addressing customs duties in the digital environment, authentication of electronic transactions, and consumer protection. Additional proposals on information flows and treatment of digital products are under discussion.
o Environment. A meaningful outcome on environment will ensure that the agreement appropriately addresses important trade and environment challenges and enhances the mutual supportiveness of trade and environment. The TPP countries share the view that the environment text should include effective provisions on trade-related issues that would help to reinforce environmental protection and are discussing an effective institutional arrangement to oversee implementation and a specific cooperation framework for addressing capacity building needs. They also are discussing proposals on new issues, such as marine fisheries and other conservation issues, biodiversity, invasive alien species, climate change, and environmental goods and services.
o Financial Services. The text related to investment in financial institutions and cross-border trade in financial services will improve transparency, non-discrimination, fair treatment of new financial services, and investment protections and an effective dispute settlement remedy for those protections. These commitments will create market-opening opportunities, benefit businesses and consumers of financial products, and at the same time protect the right of financial regulators to take action to ensure the integrity and stability of financial markets, including in the event of a financial crisis.
o Government Procurement. The text of the Government Procurement Chapter will ensure that procurement covered under the chapter is conducted in a fair, transparent, and non-discriminatory manner. The TPP negotiators have agreed on the basic principles and procedures for conducting procurement under the chapter, and are developing the specific obligations. The TPP partners are seeking comparable coverage of procurement by all the countries, while recognizing the need to facilitate the opening of the procurement markets of developing countries through the use of transitional measures.
o Intellectual Property. TPP countries have agreed to reinforce and develop existing World Trade Organization Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPS) rights and obligations to ensure an effective and balanced approach to intellectual property rights among the TPP countries. Proposals are under discussion on many forms of intellectual property, including trademarks, geographical indications, copyright and related rights, patents, trade secrets, data required for the approval of certain regulated products, as well as intellectual property enforcement and genetic resources and traditional knowledge. TPP countries have agreed to reflect in the text a shared commitment to the Doha Declaration on TRIPS and Public Health.
o
Investment. The investment text will provide substantive
legal protections for investors and investments of each TPP
country in the other TPP countries, including ongoing
negotiations on provisions to ensure non-discrimination, a
minimum standard of treatment, rules on expropriation, and
prohibitions on specified performance requirements that
distort trade and investment. The investment text will
include provisions for expeditious, fair, and transparent
investor-State dispute settlement subject to appropriate
safeguards, with discussions continuing on scope and
coverage. The investment text will protect the rights of
the TPP countries to regulate in the public interest.
o Labor. TPP countries are discussing elements for a
labor chapter that include commitments on labor rights
protection and mechanisms to ensure cooperation,
coordination, and dialogue on labor issues of mutual
concern. They agree on the importance of coordination to
address the challenges of the 21st-century workforce through
bilateral and regional cooperation on workplace practices to
enhance workers’ well-being and employability, and to
promote human capital development and high-performance
workplaces.
o Legal Issues. TPP countries have
made substantial progress on provisions concerning the
administration of the agreement, including clear and
effective rules for resolving disputes and are discussing
some of the specific issues relating to the process. TPP
countries also have made progress on exceptions from
agreement obligations and on disciplines addressing
transparency in the development of laws, regulations, and
other rules. In addition, they are discussing proposals
related to good governance and to procedural fairness issues
in specific areas.
o Market Access for Goods. The TPP
countries have agreed to establish principles and
obligations related to trade in goods for all TPP countries
that ensure that the market access that they provide to each
other is ambitious, balanced, and transparent. The text on
trade in goods addresses tariff elimination among the
partners, including significant commitments beyond the
partners’ current WTO obligations, as well as elimination
of non-tariff measures that can serve as trade barriers.
The TPP partners are considering proposals related to import
and export licensing and remanufactured goods. Additional
provisions related to agricultural export competition and
food security also are under discussion.
o Rules of Origin. TPP countries have agreed to seek a common set of rules of origin to determine whether a product originates in the TPP region. They also have agreed that TPP rules of origin will be objective, transparent and predictable and are discussing approaches regarding the ability to cumulate or use materials from within the free trade area in order to make a claim that a product is originating. In addition, the TPP countries are discussing the proposals for a system for verification of preference claims that is simple, efficient and effective.
o Sanitary and
Phytosanitary Standards (SPS). To enhance animal and plant
health and food safety and facilitate trade among the TPP
countries, the nine countries have agreed to reinforce and
build upon existing rights and obligations under the World
Trade Organization Agreement on the Application of Sanitary
and Phytosanitary Measures. The SPS text will contain a
series of new commitments on science, transparency,
regionalization, cooperation, and equivalence. In addition,
negotiators have agreed to consider a series of new
bilateral and multilateral cooperative proposals, including
import checks and verification.
o Technical Barriers
to Trade (TBT). The TBT text will reinforce and build upon
existing rights and obligations under the World Trade
Organization Agreement on Technical Barriers, which will
facilitate trade among the TPP countries and help our
regulators protect health, safety, and the environment and
achieve other legitimate policy objectives. The text will
include commitments on compliance periods, conformity
assessment procedures, international standards,
institutional mechanisms, and transparency. The TPP
countries also are discussing disciplines on conformity
assessment procedures, regulatory cooperation, trade
facilitation, transparency, and other issues, as well as
proposals that have been tabled covering specific sectors.
o Telecommunications. The telecommunications text will promote competitive access for telecommunications providers in TPP markets, which will benefit consumers and help businesses in TPP markets become more competitive. In addition to broad agreement on the need for reasonable network access for suppliers through interconnection and access to physical facilities, TPP countries are close to consensus on a broad range of provisions enhancing the transparency of the regulatory process, and ensuring rights of appeal of decisions. Additional proposals have been put forward on choice of technology and addressing the high cost of international mobile roaming.
o Temporary Entry. TPP countries have substantially concluded the general provisions of the chapter, which are designed to promote transparency and efficiency in the processing of applications for temporary entry, and ongoing technical cooperation between TPP authorities Specific obligations related to individual categories of business person are under discussion.
o Textiles and Apparel. In addition to market access on textiles and apparel, the TPP countries also are discussing a series of related disciplines, such as customs cooperation and enforcement procedures, rules of origin and a special safeguard.
o Trade Remedies. TPP countries have agreed to affirm their WTO rights and obligations and are considering new proposals, including obligations that would build upon these existing rights and obligations in the areas of transparency and procedural due process. Proposals also have been put forward relating to a transitional regional safeguard mechanism.
Tariff Schedules and Other
Market-Opening Packages
• The TPP tariff
schedule will cover all goods, representing some 11,000
tariff lines. The nine countries also are developing common
TPP rules of origin, and are weighing proposals now for how
to do this most effectively and simply.
• Services and investment packages will cover all service sectors. To ensure the high-standard outcome the nine countries are seeking, the TPP countries are negotiating on a “negative list” basis, which presumes comprehensive coverage but allows countries to negotiate specific exceptions to commitments in specific service sectors.
• Government procurement packages are
being negotiated with each country seeking to broaden
coverage to ensure the maximum access to each others’
government procurement markets, while recognizing each
others’ sensitivities.
Next Steps
• Leaders of the nine
TPP countries have instructed negotiators to meet in early
December, and at that time to schedule additional
negotiating rounds.