The leaders of Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Chile, Malaysia, New
Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United States, and Vietnam, on Nov. 12
jointly issued a Statement regarding the broad outlines of a
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement, according to the Ministry of
Industry and Trade.
Below is the full text of the TPP leaders’ statement:
“We,
the Leaders of Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Chile, Malaysia, New
Zealand, Peru, Singapore, United States, and Vietnam, are pleased to
announce today the broad outlines of a Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
agreement among our nine countries. We are delighted to have achieved
this milestone in our common vision to establish a comprehensive,
next-generation regional agreement that liberalizes trade and investment
and addresses new and traditional trade issues and 21st-century
challenges. We are confident that this agreement will be a model for
ambition for other free trade agreements in the future, forging close
linkages among our economies, enhancing our competitiveness, benefitting
our consumers and supporting the creation and retention of jobs, higher
living standards, and the reduction of poverty in our countries.
Building
on this achievement and on the successful work done so far, we have
committed here in Honolulu to dedicate the resources necessary to
conclude this landmark agreement as rapidly as possible. At the same
time, we recognize that there are sensitive issues that vary for each
country yet to be negotiated, and have agreed that together, we must
find appropriate ways to address those issues in the context of a
comprehensive and balanced package, taking into account the diversity of
our levels of development. Therefore, we have instructed our
negotiating teams to meet in early December of this year to continue
their work and furthermore to schedule additional negotiating rounds for
2012.
We are gratified by the progress that we are now able
to announce toward our ultimate goal of forging a pathway that will lead
to free trade across the Pacific. We share a strong interest in
expanding our current partnership of nine geographically and
developmentally diverse countries to others across the region. As we
move toward conclusion of an agreement, we have directed our negotiating
teams to continue talks with other trans-Pacific partners that have
expressed interest in joining the TPP in order to facilitate their
future participation.”/.