1st Edition

The Trans Pacific Partnership, China and India Economic and Political Implications

By Amitendu Palit Copyright 2014
    184 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    184 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The United States and 11 other countries from both sides of the Pacific are currently negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). The agreement is expected to set new benchmark for international trade through its comprehensive coverage of issues and binding regulations. It is expected to eventually mature into a regional trade agreement covering the entire Asia-Pacific. As of now, it does not include China and India, the two largest emerging markets and regional economies.

    The TPP has generated controversy for its excessive emphasis on trade issues, which have remained unresolved or unaddressed at the WTO due to differences between developed and emerging markets. It has also been criticized for adopting a negotiating style reflecting the US regulatory approach to international trade and also as a geo-political strategy of the US for supporting its strategic rebalancing towards Asia. From both economic and geo-political perspectives, the TPP has various significant implications for China and India that are examined in the book.

    This book sheds light on how China and India's entries in the TPP are mutually beneficial and how both countries can gain from the TPP by gaining preferential access to large markets and using it as an opportunity for introducing more outward-oriented reforms. The book also cautions that US must reconcile to the rebalancing of economic power within the grouping that will occur following the entries of China and India. Otherwise, the TPP and China and India might walk divergent paths and trade and regional integration in Asia-Pacific may not ever converge. This book will interest anyone who wishes to learn more about the TPP and its future implications and challenges and China and India's roles in global and regional trade.

    1. Why TPP, China and India  2. The Trans-Pacific Partnership: Issues and Structure  3. Economic Implications  4. Implications for Asian Regionalism  5. The Political Economy  6. China and India: How far from the TPP? 7. Strategies and Alternative Alignments

    Biography

    Amitendu Palit is an economist specializing in comparative economic studies, political economy of international trade, regional developments and public policies. His current research is on China-India comparative economic development, trade and regional architectures in the Asia-Pacific and political economy of economic reforms. He worked for several ministries in India, particularly the Ministry of Finance, where he worked for a decade. He has several academic publications to his credit. His latest book ‘China India Economics: Challenges, Competition and Collaboration’ was published in 2011. His other books include ‘Special Economic Zones in India: Myths and Realities’ (co-auhtored) and ‘South Asia: beyond the Global Financial Crisis’ (edited). Amitendu is a columnist for India’s ‘Financial Express’ and writes regularly for the China Daily, Wall Street Journal, Business Times and other leading global publications.  He features regularly the CNBC, Reuters, Channel News Asia and Doordarshan. He is married to Parama Sinha Palit and is currently based in Singapore as Head (Partnership and Programme) and Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of South Asian Studies in the National University of Singapore.

    "Amitendu Palit's book is a very useful resource that benefits from its timeliness and focus on a specific comparative research topic, China's and India's interests in and present positions towards the U.S.-led Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade negotiations." - Malcom Cook, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, Singapore