Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)

  • International Organizations
    Global Economics Monthly: June 2015
    Bottom Line: President Barack Obama’s proposal for trade promotion authority (TPA) hangs by a thread; whatever the outcome, the debate over currency policy will remain center stage on Capitol Hill. A better approach for dealing with serious policy misalignments and destructive exchange-rate policies is to empower the Group of Twenty (G20) and International Monetary Fund (IMF) to make better use of current tools. On June 12, the U.S. House of Representatives rejected legislation authorizing trade adjustment assistance, stalling a package of measures that would provide trade promotion authority to the president. Without TPA, which provides a streamlined process for congressional consideration of trade bills, agreement is unlikely to be reached on the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) deal that is the centerpiece of President Obama’s strategy toward Asia and critical to efforts at expanding trade and demonstrating U.S. leadership. Opposition to TPA/TPP among congressional Democrats reflects several concerns, including the perception that major U.S. trading partners in Asia manipulate their currencies to gain an unfair advantage in trade. The bill that passed the Senate and now sits in the House makes elimination of currency manipulation a principle negotiating objective. However, the bill does not require the United States to pursue dispute resolution or take other retaliatory actions; the inclusion of these measures could have threatened the trade agreement, prompting a veto. There are sound arguments for a more assertive approach to identify and challenge inappropriate currency and trade practices, a point made by my colleague Ted Alden (here and here). Although I am skeptical that legislation is the answer, the fundamental questions about how to address U.S. trading partners’ unfair currency practices remain unresolved and are likely to reemerge in coming months. Disagreement on Defining the Problem  Although concern over currency manipulation is far from new, a consensus on its definition has proved elusive. Many economists define currency manipulation with reference to macroeconomic outcomes, including external imbalances or an exchange-rate “misalignment” relative to some estimated equilibrium level. The difficulty with operationalizing this test is that such a misalignment depends on the full range of a government’s economic policies, and there is no accepted threshold above which an imbalance is too large. So, except for the rare cases of extreme imbalances, economic models of misalignment will seldom produce consensus for policy change. At the other end of the spectrum, manipulation could be measured by the observed act of foreign exchange-rate intervention or other direct interventions to prevent markets from reaching their natural levels. The presumption is that such direct action reflects an intent to distort trade. This latter approach is more amenable to legislation, but subject to the critique that it imperfectly captures the unwelcome behaviors, and that countries can easily achieve similar outcomes through other policies. Since 1977, the IMF has sought to bridge these competing perspectives with a seven-part test to determine whether the practices of member countries warrant IMF surveillance. Test factors include protracted, large-scale one-way intervention in the exchange markets, and large and prolonged current account surpluses. This is the approach of current U.S. law and the legislation now sitting in Congress. The U.S. Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988 requires the U.S. Treasury to issue a semiannual report identifying countries that “manipulate the rate of exchange between their currency and the United States dollar for purposes of preventing effective balance of payments adjustments or gaining unfair competitive advantage in international trade.” Although the Treasury has provided broad guidance as to how it defines manipulation and relies in part on the IMF definitions, critics have argued that the definition is too general to be effective in deterring manipulation. Further, the unwillingness of the Treasury to cite any country for manipulation in this report since 1994 has strengthened criticism that the current law is ineffective. Any credible definition of currency manipulation should capture the most egregious cases of misalignment and address visible and active episodes of government intervention in the exchange markets. China provides the most obvious example of a consensus that something was wrong: its foreign-exchange reserves rose from just over $200 billion in 2001 to nearly $2 trillion in 2008, and its current account surplus rose from 1.3 percent of gross domestic product to over 10 percent. However, since then, China’s current account surplus has fallen back to around 2 percent and reserve accumulation has slowed sharply. In April, the IMF reported that the Chinese currency currently was not misaligned. Proposed legislation should also exclude the effects of monetary policies such as the U.S. quantitative easing measures from 2008 to 2014 and Japan’s similar measures since 2013. However, monetary policy could have large effects on currency valuations and cause severe problems for trading partners, even if the intent of monetary easing was to spur domestic demand and not necessarily to weaken the currency. In the context of Japan’s experience, the Group of Seven (G7) sought to find a workable distinction between monetary policy and currency manipulation. In their February 2013 statement, G7 ministers and central bank governors endorsed fiscal and monetary policies “oriented towards meeting our respective domestic objectives using domestic instruments,” and reaffirmed their commitment not to target exchange rates. That formulation—allowing monetary easing that is aimed at domestic objectives (e.g., stimulating demand after a recession) as long as the country does not directly intervene in markets—protects monetary policy but potentially justifies a huge range of policy interventions. Further, it ensures that legislation in part driven by anger at Japan (and China) is unlikely to identify either country as a manipulator in the current environment. Legislative Proposals Will Not Address the Problem Given the lack of consensus regarding definitions, it is not surprising that a wide range of legislative proposals exist to address the problem. The existing legislation foresees a beefed-up Treasury review process, backed by the threat of future legislative action. More aggressive proposals, defeated in the Senate, would have required binding dispute settlement or allowed for countervailing duties against countries that are found to manipulate. There are a number of unconventional proposals also being discussed. C. Fred Bergsten, former head of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, suggests meeting manipulation with matching and offsetting sterilized foreign-exchange intervention, and other proposals recommend cutting off an offending country from trade and other benefits. Finally, there is already some language in the World Trade Organization (WTO) agreements designed to discourage competitive devaluations. Article XV of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) states that member countries “shall not, by exchange action, frustrate the provisions of this agreement.” In principle, this language could be tested through the dispute-settlement provisions of the WTO. No country has ever brought a case, though the U.S. Trade Representative’s office has examined the possibility in some detail. One problem with all of these proposals is that, if legislated through TPA or other trade agreements, they would only apply to countries participating in the agreement. This makes an agreement harder to achieve, punishes participants in these agreements, and creates impediments to other countries, such as China, joining these agreements at a later date. A broader concern is that this legislation reflects a further turn away from multilateralism at a time when U.S. support for an open, multilateral trading system is in question due to the failure to pass IMF reform and to effectively deal with China’s plans for an Asian infrastructure bank, among other issues. This is a point well made by the Peterson Institute’s Ted Truman and others. Real Progress Will Require Political Will  In recent years, the Treasury Department has made a meaningful effort to prioritize exchange-rate policies, pressing China and others on exchange rates in multiple forums. Arguably, these efforts have contributed to exchange rates that are better aligned now than in the past. But these efforts have mostly taken place behind closed doors, reflecting the judgment that public naming and shaming would be counterproductive. As a result, the perception exists that the United States, and the international community more generally, is not doing enough. Criticism has in particular focused on the IMF, given its mandate to oversee exchange rates, and the perception that past IMF initiatives have failed to deliver. This is not to say that the Fund has stood still. In recent years, the IMF has developed new tools to address currency misalignment and analyze the costs of protracted imbalances, including better analytics and reports examining the multilateral effects of exchange-rate misalignments, but the political will has not existed to put them into effect. Critics have pointed out, for example, the IMF’s muted criticism of apparent misalignments in recent years in leading countries such as Korea and Germany. Empowering the IMF to do a better job pursuing exchange-rate policies will require strong international support, which can only be provided by leaders through forums such as the G7 and G20. The G20, in particular, would appear to be an appropriate place to start any initiative, because it includes rising powers such as China, Korea, and Brazil that are essential for any strengthened effort to succeed. No approach, legislative or multilateral, will succeed unless there is political will at the leadership level to support a serious process. Looking Ahead: Kahn's take on the news on the horizon Finding the "Grexit" Greece looks headed to capital controls and a possible exit from the eurozone, as prospects for an agreement with official creditors look remote. Ukraine Default Looms Ukraine’s talks with creditors on a restructuring appear to have stalled, increasing the likelihood the government will stop payments on its debt. A Quiet Taper...So Far Markets expect the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates before the end of the year, contributing to increased market volatility and higher market interest rates, but there is so far little evidence of a new “taper tantrum.”
  • Trade
    The Trans-Pacific Partnership: Impact on Global Health
    The following is a guest post by my colleague Yanzhong Huang, senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations. The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), a regional trade and investment agreement currently being negotiated by twelve countries representing 40 percent of global GDP, has pushed to the surface old and new questions about the complex relationship between trade and global health. Will intellectual property provisions included in the treaty hinder, as the skeptics fear, developing countries’ access to safe and more affordable drugs? To what extent will the investment provisions (known as investor-state dispute settlement, or ISDS) open doors for private firms to challenge the sovereign rights of national governments to regulate in favor of public health? What should the United States do to advance special rules for certain industries and foster innovation without undermining public health standards of citizens in all signatory nations? In this next installment of The Internationalist podcast series, CFR Senior Fellow for Global Health Yanzhong Huang speaks with Suerie Moon, research director and co-chair of the Forum on Global Governance for Health at the Harvard Global Health Institute. Listen in to hear Moon’s important insight into the potential dangers to global health governance contained in the current TPP agreement and how she thinks those pitfalls can and should be avoided.
  • Global
    The World Next Week: May 7, 2015
    Podcast
    President Obama hosts leaders from the Gulf Cooperation Council; the Washington International Trade Association discusses the Transpacific Partnership negotiations; and V-E Day is observed.
  • Trade
    The TPP and the Bicycle Theory of Trade
    I am having a hard time making up my mind about economic pluses and minuses of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), the pending trade deal that will deepen economies ties between the United States, Japan and 10 other Asia-Pacific nations. Nick Martin, a cycle shop owner in Colorado who has been made a poster child for the deal by the White House, has shown me why. I love cycling, but I especially love bicycles. My wife and I spent our honeymoon touring Europe on bikes. I ride to work as much as I can. To my mind the bicycle is the most nearly perfect of inventions, one that multiplies the efficiency of purely human energy. Bikes are also beautiful objects--if I didn’t ride mine all the time, I’d hang it Seinfeld-style on the wall. I am especially proud of my road bike, a Cannondale aluminum-framed bicycle that proudly carries a “Made in the USA” logo. The bikes are assembled in a small factory in Bedford, Pennsylvania. Or at least they were assembled in Bedford. Last year, Cannondale shut down the plant, which was its last in the United States, and moved the remaining production to China and Taiwan. Today, there is almost no bike production left in the United States. Trek, the Wisconsin-based company, does have two factories in its home state that build the highest-end carbon frame bikes that can cost in the thousands of dollars. But all the rest of its production is offshore. The National Bicycle Dealers Association says that about 99 percent of bicycles sold in the United States in 2013 were imported, mostly from China and Taiwan. While there are still dozens of very small, specialized bike makers in the United States, total domestic production in 2013 was about 56,000 bikes, compared with 16.2 million imports. Enter Nick Martin. The White House--eager to build support in Congress for the controversial TPP deal--last week shared an email from Mr. Martin, in which he identifies himself as “a cyclist and the proud co-owner of The Pro’s Closet.” Mr. Martin is an enthusiastic proponent of the TPP, arguing that it will open large new international markets for his product. Excellent, I thought. A new, start-up bike manufacturer poised to sell into global markets. Exactly the revival of American manufacturing that we’ve been hearing so much about. Indeed, there have been some encouraging recent developments. The Bicycle Corporation of America, a New Jersey company that hasn't made a bike in the United States since 1990, announced last November that it would open a new factory in South Carolina. The key was a decision by Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer which has been criticized for its reliance on Chinese imports, to increase it purchases of U.S.-made goods by $250 billion over the next decade. These will be the first U.S.-assembled bikes sold by Wal-Mart in more than a decade. I had assumed that the White House was championing another "made in America" success story. Only on a closer read, Mr. Martin’s company does not actually make bikes. It does not make components for bikes. It doesn’t make gear or clothing for cyclists. What it does is to sell used bicycles and equipment over the Internet, using eBay and other e-commerce platforms. The TPP, which would include new rules on digital trade and would further lower tariffs, should help him find new overseas buyers. “International customers aren’t just good for business abroad; they’re great for my Colorado communities,” he wrote. “Why? Because selling in more markets means I can hire more people here at home.” There is much to admire in Mr. Martin’s business. Like many American companies, he has found innovative ways to create new markets where none existed before. Buying or selling a used bicycle once meant putting an ad in your local newspaper; The Pro’s Closet takes in bikes from everywhere--including the leftovers from professional cycling teams--and resells them online, taking a cut of the profits. More than half its customers are international. It’s also environmentally friendly (“Buy something that already exists,” the company says. “It’s the greenest way to go”). While I haven’t seen any stats on it, I’m sure that fewer bicycles are ending up in the landfill these days simply because there are more ways than ever before to find a buyer for your old bike. All the same, compared to actually making new bicycles, the economic potential of the internet resale business would seem to be rather limited. Even today, Trek says it still employs nearly 1,000 people in the United States, about half of those in manufacturing. Bicycle Corporation's new South Carolina factory has hired 75 new workers, though at very modest wages, and its goal is 200 in four years.  The Pro’s Closet currently employs just thirty. This is part of what trade does of course--it creates enormous economic churn. It has become cheaper to make many things, and especially commodity products like all but the highest-end bicycles, in lower wage countries. That’s great for consumers, and for retailers – there are four bike shops right in my neighborhood that probably wouldn’t be there if they couldn’t sell the cheaper imports. Rich countries like the United States have to find new ways to adapt and prosper despite the loss of that manufacturing work. Mr. Martin’s business is doing that, and the TPP will undoubtedly help not only his company but other small online retailers as well, creating new jobs and new opportunities in this country. And TPP or no TPP, the United States is not about to re-emerge as a big manufacturer of bicycles – the economics simply don’t work. But I must admit to a bit of nostalgia for what has been lost as the world economy grows ever more competitive, a trend that the TPP will only accelerate. I admire Mr. Martin’s entrepreneurial energy, and hope he succeeds wildly. But I am going to hang on to my Made in the USA Cannondale until one of us breaks down.
  • Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
    The Trans-Pacific Partnership
    Overview The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) talks represent an attempt to link together at least nine countries in three continents to create a "high-quality, twenty-first century agreement." Such an agreement is intended to open markets to more competition than ever before between the partners in sectors ranging from goods and services to investment, and includes rigorous rules in the fields of intellectual property, labour protection and environmental conservation. The TPP also aims to improve regulatory coherence, enhance production supply chains and help boost small and medium-sized enterprises. It could transform relations with regions such as Latin America, paving the way to an eventual Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific, or see innovations translated into the global trade regulatory system operating under the WTO. However, given the tensions between strategic and economic concerns, the final deal could still collapse into something closer to a standard, "twentieth century" trade agreement. In his chapter, "Regulatory Coherence in the TPP Talks," CFR Senior Fellow Thomas J. Bollyky examines the pending TPP regulatory coherence negotiations, focusing on the role of domestic regulation in international trade, the evolution of regulatory coherence, provisions that would best achieve the goals of regulatory coherence, and the likely outcome of the TPP talks in this area.