EU, Japan agree to work towards free trade deal

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The European Union and Japan said Saturday they had agreed to work towards a multi-billion-euro free trade deal linking the world’s third biggest economy to the globe’s largest market. A statement issued after a Japan-EU summit said leaders “agreed to start the process” for “negotiations for a deep and comprehensive Free Trade Agreement (FTA)/Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA), addressing all issues of shared interest to both sides.”
To this end, the two sides would begin talks “as soon as possibble” aimed at “defining the scope and level of ambition” at stake, the joint statement said. Concretely, this means Tokyo and Brussels will have to hammer out a list of problems to address and goals to achieve before the 27-member EU gives its official go-ahead to the launch of FTA negotiations.
That process, known in EU jargon as a “scoping exercise”, is likely to take six to nine months, EU officials said after the talks between Japan’s Prime Minister Naoto Kan, EU Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso and bloc president Herman Van Rompuy. The summit statement listed issues to look at as including tariffs, non-tariff-measures, services, investment, intellectual property rights, competition and public procurement.
To speed up the kick-off of FTA negotiations proper, the EU executive, the European Commission, will immediately begin a process to authorise the talks “on the basis of a successful scoping”, the statement added. Japan had long pressed the EU to use the Saturday summit as the stage to announce a formal launch of FTA talks but Europe reneged, demanding more assurances of a level playing field before taking that path. The EU’s trade deficit with Japan, it’s sixth trading partner, has narrowed over the last decade from 47 billion euros in 2000 to 21 billion in 2010.
European nations and business leaders complain of market access problems for foreign firms in Japan. Europe notably complains over unfair treatment in government procurement, comparing a 312-billion-euro procurements market (2.5 percent of EU GDP) open to Japanese companies in 2007, to a 22-billion-euro share (0.5 percent of Japan’s GDP) offered to EU firms. The EU’s signature of an FTA with Asian rival South Korea last year has upped Tokyo’s insistence on a deal to offset fears that Japan’s famed electronic appliances and automobiles may lose a competitive edge.
Britain’s Foreign Secretary William Hague this month touted the prospects of a golden pot. The removal of tariff and non-tariff barriers could deliver over 40 billion euros ($60 billion) of additional European exports to Japan, and more than 50 billion euros of extra exports from Japan to the EU, he said.