EU, Indonesia launch free trade talks


Indonesian president Joko Widodo (L) is welcomed by European Union Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker (R) prior to their meeting at the European Parliament in Brussels, on April 21, 2016. / AFP PHOTO / THIERRY CHARLIER

BRUSSELS: The EU’s 28 member states agreed on Monday to launch free trade talks with Indonesia, despite growing public doubts in Europe about two major transatlantic deals.

The deal with Indonesia will build on pacts with other Asian powers such as Singapore and Vietnam.

“The EU and Indonesia represent a huge market of 750 million consumers. These negotiations are key to unleash synergies between our economies,” said EU Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmstroem and Indonesian Trade Minister Tom Lembong in a joint statement.

But the decision comes at a difficult time for trade policy in Brussels with opposition growing as public opinion in Europe becomes increasingly doubtful on the benefits of globalisation.

Already a deal between the EU and Canada faces a risky ratification process among the 28 member states, while a proposed accord with the US seems at risk of being abandoned.

The EU also faces possible future trade talks with Britain when it eventually leaves the bloc following last month’s referendum.

The EU is Indonesia’s fourth largest trading partner with agricultural products a key export. Indonesia is the EU’s fifth largest trading partner in South-East Asia but only 30th overall.

The talks with Indonesia would begin by the end of the year, the statement said.

In addition to Indonesia, the EU is already in free trade talks with Philippines, Malaysia and Thailand, having concluded deals with Singapore in 2014 and Vietnam in 2015.

All are members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean). EU efforts to negotiate an overall trade accord with the 10-nation group have stalled, with the focus now put on bilateral deals.

Asean includes wealthy Singapore, one of the world’s most developed countries, oil-rich Brunei, developing states such as Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines and Vietnam, and poorer nations like Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar.

The bilateral deals “serve as building blocks towards a future EU-Asean agreement, which remains the EU’s ultimate objective,” the statement said. - AFP


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