APEC Summit – Final Thoughts from Bali

As we finish our coverage of the Bali APEC Summit our team has a few final thoughts.

This was a successful global meeting but as the event came to a close a little rift between China and the US emerged over the TPP – Trans-Pacific Partnership. The Us created and is pushing this free trade pact, China opposes it and this created some tension on the final day in Bali.

As Bali came to a close the United States intensified its drive to clinch an ambitious Asia-Pacific trade pact by the end of the year, which China clearly didn’t like.

The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) event, at a five-star resort on the tropical island of Bali, was aimed at breaking down trade barriers among all 21 member economies amid the gloom of a faltering global economy.

Members of APEC, which groups just over half of the global economy, voiced concerns in a closing statement about its fragile state.

“Global growth is too weak, risks remain tilted to the downside, global trade is weakening and the economic outlook suggests growth is likely to be slower and less balanced than desired,” the leaders’ statement said.

But clashing agendas by the United States and China overshadowed the gathering of leaders, as well as preceding meetings by their trade chiefs.

US President Barack Obama had to pull out of the APEC summit because of a deepening political and financial crisis in Washington, and several leaders in Bali expressed concern about the threat of a US debt default.

But, filling in for Obama, Secretary of State John Kerry pressed on with a full-court lobbying press to try to secure agreement on the “Trans-Pacific Partnership” grouping 12 APEC nations.

Significantly, the TPP excludes China. And Indonesia, Southeast Asia’s largest economy, has stayed out.

After the APEC summit finished, Kerry convened a meeting of leaders of the 11 other TPP nations — including Australia, Japan, Malaysia and Mexico — in a bid to beat an against-the-odds deadline set by Obama for a deal by the end of 2013.

In a statement, the United States and its TPP partners said they were still aiming to clinch the deal in less than three months after making “significant progress” on a range of issues.

“We see the Trans-Pacific Partnership, with its high ambition and pioneering standards for new trade disciplines, as a model for future trade agreements,” the statement said.

The United States has championed the TPP as setting “gold standards” to deal with complex changes to the 21st-century economy, such as how to police cloud computing and patents.

But China, and even some developing nations included in the TPP, have expressed concern that it will lay down trade rules mainly benefiting the richest countries and most powerful firms.

“China will commit itself to building a trans-Pacific regional cooperation framework that benefits all parties,” President Xi Jinping said at the APEC business forum, which came after he oversaw tens of billions of dollars in trade deals on visits to Jakarta and Kuala Lumpur.

Xi’s comments were interpreted in China’s state-run media on Tuesday as direct criticism of the TPP.

As many leaders head to Brunei, this debate will continue.