TOKYO (Oct 6): The Trans-Pacific Partnership is the biggest trade agreement in history, reducing tariffs and other forms of protectionism in a dozen countries making up about 40% of the global economy with economic output of almost US$30 trillion ($42.7 trillion).
The White House estimates it will eliminate 18,000 tariffs on US-manufactured goods, while giving everyone from Vietnamese shrimpers to New Zealand dairy farmers cheaper access to markets across the Pacific. Critics, particularly in the US, say it will kill American manufacturing jobs, reduce environmental standards and raise drug prices.
The deal sealed Monday in Atlanta came after more than five years of negotiations between the TPP nations -- the US, Canada, Japan, Australia, Brunei, Chile, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam.
The agreement must still be ratified by lawmakers in the TPP nations before it can take effect and President Barack Obama is likely to face a fight to secure passage by the US Congress.
Japan:
Australia:
New Zealand:
Vietnam:
Malaysia:
China: