Asia

Indo-Pacific Nations, US to Set Up Supply Chain Crisis Hotline

 

Trade ministers of 14 countries in the US-led Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF) reached their first tangible deal after year-long negotiations, “substantially” completing talks on supply chains resilience, the US Commerce Department said on Saturday.

The “first of its kind” agreement calls for countries to form a council to coordinate supply chain activities and a “Crisis Response Network” to give early warnings to IPEF countries on potential supply disruptions, US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told a press conference in Detroit.

The deal provides an emergency communications channel for IPEF countries to seek support during supply chain disruptions, coordinate more closely during a crisis and recover more quickly.

 

Also on AF: US Says ‘Won’t Tolerate’ China’s ‘Coercive’ Micron Chip Ban

 

The supply chains agreement also includes a new labor rights advisory board aimed at raising labor standards in supply chains, consisting of government, worker, and employer representatives.

Supply chains negotiations are one of four “pillars” of the IPEF, which represents the Biden administration’s main economic initiative in Asia. It is aimed, in part, at providing countries in the region with an alternative to closer ties with China.

China is not part of the IPEF discussions, but participated in Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) trade talks in Detroit, which wrapped up on Friday with a pledge for more inclusive trade but no joint statement.

 

CHIPS Act benefit

The other three IPEF pillars — trade, climate transition, and labor and inclusiveness — are more complex and expected to take longer to negotiate. But US officials are aiming for more results by the time of the APEC leaders summit in San Francisco in November.

Raimondo also said the IPEF agreement on supply chains and other pillars of the talks would be consistent with US investments in the $52 billion CHIPS Act to foster semiconductor production in the United States.

“The investments in the CHIPS Act are to strengthen and bolster our domestic production of semiconductors. Having said that, we welcome participation from companies that are in IPEF countries, you know, so we expect that companies from Japan, Korea, Singapore, etc, will participate in the CHIPS Act funding,” Raimondo said.

 

IPEF goals ‘misunderstood’

IPEF’s trade pillar does not include negotiations over tariff reductions or other market-access aspects of traditional free trade deals, but aims for common rules on agriculture, labor, environmental standards and trade facilitation.

US Trade Representative Katherine Tai, along with Raimondo, pushed back against complaints from US farm and industry groups that IPEF lacks market access improvements, putting it at a disadvantage to other trade deals in the region, including one led by China.

Raimondo said that view reflects a “misunderstanding” of IPEF’s goals.

Tai added that IPEF “from the very beginning, is not a traditional trade deal. We’re not just trying to maximize efficiencies and liberalization. We’re trying to promote sustainability, resilience and inclusiveness.”

“We have more work to do but I am confident that we will start seeing results under Pillar 1 in the months ahead,” Tai said.

 

  • Reuters, with additional editing by Vishakha Saxena

 

Also read:

Japan and US Agree to Cooperate on Advanced Technology

China Says it Will Strengthen Chip Ties With South Korea

US, China Ministers Hold ‘Candid’ Talks on Trade Concerns

China’s Micron Ban Adds to Asian Chipmakers’ Investment Woes

US Risks ‘Enormous Damage’ With China Chip War: Nvidia CEO

Tech Supply Chains Will Shape Politics For Decades: Intel – CNN

 

 

Vishakha Saxena

Vishakha Saxena is the Multimedia and Social Media Editor at Asia Financial. She has worked as a digital journalist since 2013, and is an experienced writer and multimedia producer. As a trader and investor, she is keenly interested in new economy, emerging markets and the intersections of finance and society. You can write to her at vishakha.saxena@asiafinancial.com

Recent Posts

China’s Theft of Trade Secrets Our No1 Concern: US Patent Chief

The US official said US businesses operating in China regularly complain about insufficient protections and…

3 hours ago

Intel Set to Unveil Reduced-Performance AI Chips for China

The news comes after the US outfit came under fire at the weekend after it…

5 hours ago

US Reviewing Trade Sanctions to Tackle China Supply Chain Threats

White House trade chief Katherine Tai will tell lawmakers the administration is even looking at…

6 hours ago

Baidu Says AI Chatbot ‘Ernie’ Has 200m Users A Day

'Ernie Bot' is China’s most popular chatbot. Baidu earned several hundred million yuan using AI…

9 hours ago

Nissan Eyes Solid-State EV Battery Breakthrough by 2029 – AP

While rivals claim to be further ahead in the race to develop the next generation…

10 hours ago

China Sees Surprising GDP Growth, But Weak Demand in March

China saw 5.3% growth in the first quarter, well over analysts' expectations, but data on…

10 hours ago