(PART 1)

Biden launches Indo-Pacific economic framework to counter China

The framework boasts four essential pillars -- trade, supply chains, 
sustainable energy, and infrastructure -- as well as tax and anti-corruption.

By Julian Bingley, May 23, 2022 
https://www.zdnet.com/article/biden-launches-indo-pacific-economic-framework-to-counter-china/


US President Joe Biden has launched a new economic framework geared towards 
countering Chinese influence in Asia and announced the 12 regional partners who 
will cooperate on shared standards in areas such as clean energy and 5G network 
advancements.

Biden, in his first visit to Japan as president, presented the Indo-Pacific 
Economic Framework for Prosperity in a speech on Monday, citing four essential 
pillars -- trade, supply chains, sustainable energy, and infrastructure -- as 
well as tax and anti-corruption. Meanwhile, the White House claimed that the 
framework -- as based on these pillars -- will ensure that supply chains in the 
region develop greater resilience to protect against higher prices for 
consumers.

"We're here today for one simple purpose: the future of the 21st Century 
economy is going to be largely written in the Indo-Pacific," Biden said in 
Tokyo.

"[The framework is a commitment to] improving security and trust in the digital 
economy, protecting workers, strengthening supply chains, and tackling 
corruption that robs nations of their ability to serve their citizens.

Biden added the framework would work towards eliminating critical supply chain 
bottlenecks, carbon from the economy, and work towards clean energy and 
developing "early warning systems" to identify problems before they happen.

"Let's start with new rules governing trade in digital goods and services so 
companies don't have to hand over the proprietary technology to do business in 
a country," Biden said.

The 12 regional partners include Australia, Brunei, India, Indonesia, Japan, 
South Korea, Malaysia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and 
Vietnam. All of these partners, excluding Australia and India, were also 
signatories to China's Belt and Road Initiative.

The framework marks Biden's latest attempt to shore up US support in the 
Asia-Pacific region after former President Donald Trump withdrew from the 
Trans-Pacific Partnership in 2017.

Further to this, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol pledged his country's 
support for the framework, and also announced that South Korea will now become 
a signatory of the Declaration for the Future of the Internet.

Meanwhile, Google said from the announcement that it expects a greater 
commitment to cybersecurity collaboration in the region, as well as a 
commitment to the free flow of data between countries and businesses.

"This is the moment for Indo-Pacific countries to chart a bold, inclusive and 
sustainable path forward to address common challenges and seize the tremendous 
opportunities the digital economy can bring," Google said.


(PART 2)

China lashes out at US-led Asia-Pacific trade framework

Chinese officials describe the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework, which has 12 
participating Asia-Pacific nations, as the US government's attempts to 
"contain" China as well as create divisions, arguing that the initiative 
ultimately will fail.

By Eileen Yu, May 24, 2022 
https://www.zdnet.com/article/china-lashes-out-at-us-led-asia-pacific-trade-framework/

China has lashed out at a trade initiative led by the US, which aims to 
establish mutually agreed standards in four key areas including the digital 
economy and supply chains. Beijing has described the move as the Biden 
administration's attempts to "contain" China and create divisions.

The Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF) was launched on Monday with 12 
participating nations from the region, including Singapore, Australia, India, 
Indonesia and Japan.

This group accounted for 40% of global GDP and 60% of the world's population.

It is expected to the largest contributor of global growth over the next three 
decades, according to the US government. It touted the benefits of the new 
framework for America, adding that trade with the Indo-Pacific supports more 
than 3 million American jobs.

Brunei, South Korea, Malaysia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Thailand, and 
Vietnam also are part of the trade framework.

[Asean champions regional efforts in cybersecurity, urges international 
participation. Currently the only regional organisation to adapt UN's 11 norms 
of state cyberspace behaviour, Asean pledges to drive deeper collaboration and 
interoperability amongst member states and calls for other international 
communities to cooperate amid increasing cyber threats.   Read now ..]

The IPEF aimed to address 21st century economic issues with various 
arrangements that spanned establishing rules for the digital economy, ensuring 
secure and resilient supply chains, driving investments in clean energy 
infrastructure, and improving standards for transparency and fair taxation.

Noting that past models did not address challenges across these areas, the 
Biden administration said a new model was necessary to resolve them.

It added that businesses increasingly were looking for alternatives to China 
and countries participating in the Indo-Pacific Framework would be "more 
reliable partners" for US businesses.

The IPEF, however, will not lay out plans for tariffs or easier market access, 
which are common objectives of traditional free trade agreements. Rather, the 
Indo-Pacific framework will pull its partners together through agreed standards 
across the four key areas.

Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said he welcomed an "open, inclusive, 
and rules-based order" and stressed the need for the framework to remain so. He 
added that members should be able to work with other partners in other 
overlapping agreements.

Lee said: "IPEF is of both strategic and economic significance. It can be a 
valuable platform for the US to exercise economic diplomacy in the region, and 
it clearly signals the US' continued commitment to engage with its partners in 
Asia, and deepen ties across the Pacific."

The IPEF launch, though, has ruffled feathers in China, where government 
officials describe the move as the US' attempts to create division and fuel 
confrontation.

Chinese State Councillor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi said the US-led strategy 
was bound for failure, according to a report by state-owned media agency Xinhua.

Wang said the IPEF was the US government's strategy to create division, incite 
geopolitical confrontation, and undermine peace. Its objective was to "contain" 
China, he added.

Rather than drive free trade, he said the IPEF attempted to pursue 
protectionism. Noting that the US had pulled out from the Trans-Pacific 
Partnership (TPP), he added that the US was choosing to undermine existing 
regional cooperation infrastructures instead of following free-trade rules.

Wang said: "Is the US trying to speed up the recovery of the global economy or 
is it trying to create economic decoupling, technological blockade and 
industrial disruption, and aggravate the supply chain crisis? The US should 
learn from the trade war it launched against China a few years ago, which 
brought severe consequences to the world and US itself."

He said it would be wrong for the US to use the IPEF as a political tool to 
safeguard its regional economic hegemony and deliberately exclude specific 
countries. He further questioned the Biden administration's intent to force 
governments in this region to choose sides between China and the US.

Chinese daily tabloid Global Times, which is owned by state-run People's Daily, 
published a commentary highlighting the lack of market access and tariff 
provisions as a significant problem with the IPEF, giving no practical trade 
incentives for participating members. It added that the framework had not been 
approved by the US congress and lacked political sustainability.

Global Times also accused the US of using the trade framework to "dominate" 
rules and standards in digital technologies, such as artificial intelligence 
and 5G.

"IPEF, which excludes China, is driven more by geopolitical considerations 
rather than economic factors," the paper said. "Countries in the region do not 
want to be trapped in the predicament of taking sides between Beijing and 
Washington, as China is their largest trading partner. China should have 
confidence in facing the US' strategic containment. As long as Chinese 
government keeps the right direction concerning domestic and foreign policies 
and continues opening up, the US will be unable to stop China's continuous 
rise."

In an interview with Nikkei, Singapore's Lee said the IPEF as an alternative to 
an FTA arrangement between Asian nations and the US, which failed to 
materialise under the TPP. He added that the framework reflected the intent to 
cooperate on economic issues that were relevant to the region, including 
digital economies, supply chains, and green energy.

He noted that details under the IPEF had not been negotiated, though, "broad 
areas" had been identified. "So we will go in and we will try to work out 
something as substantive and mutually beneficial as we can," Lee said, pointing 
to carbon trading rules, digital economy, and sustainable finance as areas 
Singapore was keen to discuss as part of the IPEF.

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