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News > World

Secretive TPP Trade Deal Approved by Ministers

  • Workers demonstrate to protest against the Trans-Pacific Partnership in Tokyo, Japan, May 1, 2013. People in many countries are opposing the secretive deal.

    Workers demonstrate to protest against the Trans-Pacific Partnership in Tokyo, Japan, May 1, 2013. People in many countries are opposing the secretive deal. | Photo: EFE

Published 5 October 2015
Opinion

The TPP is considered the most sweeping trade agreement in over a decade.

Trade ministers from 12 nations Monday approved the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a secretive trade agreement that will further liberalize trade in the Pacific Rim.

The agreement, which has been under negotiation since 2008, is largely unknown to the public; those parts that are known were leaked. WikiLeaks had offered up to US$100,000 dollars for the full draft of the controversial deal, but were not able to obtain it.

According to estimates, the TPP will affect 40 percent of the world economy.

RELATED: What Drives Governments to Keep TISA, TPP and TTIP Secret?

The agreement will now have to be approved by the lawmakers of each signing country.

Officials had been negotiating the last details of the deal since Wednesday last week and, although the approval was expected Sunday, it was delayed over last-minute disagreements.

The most difficult issues that damped negotiations included terms and measures regarding pharmaceutical and dairy products.

The deal, which excludes China and Russia, is regarded by experts as a U.S.-led effort to strengthen its position in the Pacific, were Beijing has gained ground over the past decade.

Other experts believe that the TPP will become the basis for a broader trade agreement within the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, which does include China and Russia.

Countries which are part of the TPP include Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United States, and Vietnam.

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