Chinese President Xi Jinping urged Asia-Pacific leaders today to get on board with Beijing-backed free trade agreements, after Donald Trump's election win spelled the likely demise of a US-backed deal.
Trump's shock victory has cast uncertainty on the future of Washington's key trade initiative in the Pacific Rim, the arduously negotiated, 12-country Trans-Pacific Partnership, or TPP.
The brash billionaire campaigned against the accord, which has not yet been ratified in Congress, as a "terrible deal" that would "rape" the United States by sending American jobs to countries with cheaper labor.
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Beijing, which was excluded from TPP, is pushing two alternatives: the 21-member Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific (FTAAP) and a 16-member Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), which notably includes India but not the United States.
Xi urged regional leaders to advance both deals at a summit in Lima, Peru, where the uncertainty unleashed on the world stage by Trump's victory loomed large.
"Building a Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific is a strategic initiative critical for the long-term prosperity of the Asia-Pacific," Xi said in a keynote address to business leaders from the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) group.
"We should firmly pursue FTAAP," he said. "Openness is vital for the prosperity of the Asia-Pacific."
In the face of Trump's protectionist rhetoric, he vowed China "will not shut its door to the outside world, but open it even wider."
"We will fully involve ourselves in economic globalization by supporting the multi-lateral trading regime, advancing the FTAAP and working for the early conclusion of the negotiations on the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership," he said.
China describes RCEP as a stepping stone toward FTAAP, a vast plan that would include all 21 APEC members and is expected to take years, if it happens at all.
The meeting of APEC, which accounts for nearly 40 percent of the world's population and nearly 60 percent of the global economy, is US President Barack Obama's last foreign visit before handing over to Trump on January 20.
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