The Pros And Cons Of The Trans-Pacific Partnership

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Over the past few decades, free trade has been seen by neo-liberalists as an excellent way to ensure economic growth and development. So for the past few years, the United States and 11 other nations have been negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), an economic trade agreement that would promote economic progress and cooperation. Supporters of this trade pact argue that the TPP would foster economic growth, assert American influence over Chinese influence, and help improve environmental and labor laws among participating countries. However, critics of this agreement content that this deal will lead to American job losses and trade deficits, pharmaceutical monopolies on drugs and drug prices, and the lack of protection against currency The first provision of the TPP that would help foster economic growth is the vast reduction in trade barriers among participating nations. As of now, many countries place large amounts of tariffs on goods when trading with the United States. For example, Malaysia places a “40% tariff on US poultry” (Krist, 2015), while other tariffs on American goods are as a high as “59% on U.S. machinery, up to 70% on automotive products” (Davidson, 2015). But with the TPP, the 12 nations would eliminate virtually all of these trade barriers among themselves, but with a few minor exceptions. In fact according to U.S. trade representative, Michael Froman (2015), these trade tariffs will “either be zero or much lower than they are now, creating more opportunities for American firms to compete and to export products abroad.” This would be a complete improvement upon the World Trade Organization’s (WTO) provisions, which in contrast “maintain tariffs which on some products can be particularly high” (Krist, 2015). With this trade agreement, America can expect to ship more of its goods abroad due to the dramatic lowering of trade tariffs, which would in turn help grow the economy. In addition, American manufacturers would no longer be at a disadvantage with foreign manufacturers because without this deal, U.S. manufacturers Although some business sectors in the U.S. were optimistic about the TPP, many sectors in the U.S. are still weary due to the ongoing practice of currency manipulation. Currency manipulation is when “countries play currency games to make their products more affordable and U.S. products more expensive”(Krist, 2015). The effects of this are mainly seen in trades between the U.S., Japan and China. For years China has kept the value of its yuan artificially low, to the point where “ it limited the growth of U.S. exports to China, and the U.S. trade gap ballooned” (Ip, 2015). Currency manipulation is still a concern for the American auto-industry which fears that Japan’s ongoing currency manipulation will help “lower the cost of Japan’s auto-imports” (Davidson, 2015). In fact, currency manipulation has had such a dramatic effect on the American economy that “causes a loss of one to five million jobs in the United States and increases our trade deficit by $200 to $500 billion annually” (Bergsten, 2015). Clearly, currency manipulation is a powerful economic weapon that some people believe needs to be disarmed before the TPP can be

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