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China pledges further opening as leaders scramble for free trade

As momentum shifts to a China-led regional free trade deal and hopes fade for the Trans-Pacific Partnership, Malcolm Turnbull insists the perfect cannot be the enemy of the good.

China's President Xi Jinping waves after speaking at the CEO summit during the annual Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum in Lima, Peru, Saturday, Nov. 19, 2016. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
China's President Xi Jinping waves after speaking at the CEO summit Source: AP

Chinese President Xi Jinping pledged on Saturday to further open the world's second-largest economy as leaders of Asia-Pacific countries gathered in Peru to find new free-trade options after Donald Trump was elected U.S. president on a protectionist platform.

The annual APEC summit got under way in Lima just over a week after Trump's surprise victory dashed hopes of the largest-ever U.S.-proposed trade deal, the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), coming to fruition.

U.S. President Barack Obama has championed the TPP as a way to counter China's rise, but his administration has now stopped trying to win congressional approval for the deal, which was signed by 12 economies in the Americas and Asia-Pacific, excluding China. Without U.S. approval the agreement as currently negotiated cannot be implemented.

Throughout his campaign, Trump strongly criticized U.S. free-trade deals, vowing to pull the world's biggest economy out of the TPP and promising to impose tariffs on imports from trade partners China and Mexico.

China's Xi is selling an alternate vision for regional trade by promoting the Beijing-backed Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), which as it stands excludes the Americas.

"China will not shut its door to the outside world but open more," Xi said in a keynote address.

Chinese attendance at the APEC meeting was its largest ever and delegates from around the region pointed to the possibility of China taking the lead on free trade if the U.S. were to turn towards protectionism.

But the Obama administration has warned that the RCEP would not include strong protections for workers, the environment or intellectual property.

In Lima on his last scheduled trip abroad as president, Obama told students he hoped there would not be major changes in policy towards Latin America in the Trump administration.

The U.S. had worked hard to include labor provisions in a U.S.-Peru free trade agreement in order to lift wages and standards for Peruvian workers, he said.

"That's the kind of attitude that we want to promote in the years going forward and my hope is that policy will continue," he said.

The TPP leaders held a meeting at APEC, where Obama urged them to work together to advance TPP, the White House said in a statement.

The leaders had confirmed the economic and strategic importance of the agreement, Japanese Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Kotaro Nogami told reporters after the meeting on Saturday.


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Source: SBS News



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