Wednesday February 22, 2012

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Past Event

A CENTER FOR NORTHEAST ASIAN POLICY STUDIES EVENT

Japan and the Trans-Pacific Partnership

Japan, Asia, Australia and the Pacific, Trade

Event Summary

Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda recently announced that Japan would start talks with member countries on participating in the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). TPP is regarded by many as the best route to a Free Trade Area of the Asia Pacific, a goal for many in the region since 1993. Prime Minister Noda’s decision to move forward with the United States, Australia, Brunei, Chile, Malaysia, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam was welcomed by President Barack Obama, but met with caution on Capitol Hill. TPP also remains controversial within Japan. As Japan attempts to rebuild in the aftermath of the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear crisis that struck on March 11, deal with an aging and declining population, contend with a strong yen, and define its role in the context of a rising China and a fast-changing Asia Pacific, TPP promises to remain a topic of keen interest.

Event Information

When

Friday, December 02, 2011
8:45 AM to 12:30 PM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Event Materials

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

Email: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105


On December 2, the Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies at Brookings and the Sasakawa Peace Foundation USA hosted a conference that examined Japan’s potential entry into the TPP, addressing the opportunities and pitfalls the trade pact may present for its economic future and that of the region. Leading experts provided diverse perspectives on recent developments and future prospects, as well as the state of the debate within Japan, the United States and other current members of TPP.

After each panel, speakers took audience questions.

Transcript

RICHARD BUSH: Morning. My name is Richard Bush. I’m the director of the Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies at the Brookings Institution, and it’s my great pleasure to welcome all of you in this room and all our friends in the overflow room to this symposium on "Japan and the Trans-Pacific Partnership."

I think trade liberalization in Asia is starting to get interesting. Any time the world’s largest economy and the world’s either second or third largest economy -- depending on how you count -- declare an intention to explore trade liberalization. It’s a big deal. And so we’re very pleased to put on this symposium today.

We have an outstanding set of speakers, and I intend to learn a lot from today’s session, and I hope you do as well.

Brookings could not have put on this symposium and we would not have put on this symposium if it had not been for the initiative and active participation of our co-sponsor, the Sasakawa Peace Foundation USA. Dan Bob, the director of SPF USA’s office here in Washington, D.C., has really made this program come together, and we’re deeply grateful to him and to his staff.

Participants

8:45 AM -- Introduction

Richard C. Bush III

Director, Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies

Junko Chano

President
Sasakawa Peace Foundation USA

9:00 AM -- Panel 1: TPP: Views from Tokyo and Washington

Moderator: Timothy Keeler

Partner
Mayer Brown LLP

Wendy Cutler

Assistant U.S. Trade Representative
Office of the U.S. Trade Representative

William C. "Bill" Lane

Director, Washington Office
Caterpillar Inc.

Michitaka Nakatomi

Principal Trade Negotiator
Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry

10:00 AM -- Panel 2: Japan, TPP, and the Global Trade Regime

Moderator: Edward Lincoln

Former Director, Center for Japan Business and Economic Studies, Stern School of Business
New York University

Mike Moore

Ambassador of New Zealand to the United States

Tami Overby

Vice President for Asia
U.S. Chamber of Commerce

Clayton Yeutter

Senior Advisor, Hogan Lovells
Former U.S. Trade Representative and former U.S. Secretary of Agriculture

11:15 am -- Panel 3: Japan’s Perspectives on TPP

Moderator: Daniel Bob

Senior Fellow and Director of U.S.-Japan Programs
Sasakawa Peace Foundation USA

Kiyoaki Aburaki

U.S. Representative, Keidanren
Visiting Fellow, Center for Strategic and International Studies

Richard Katz

Editor-in-Chief, The Oriental Economist
Special Correspondent, Weekly Toyo Keizai

Heizo Takenaka

Director, Global Security Research Institute, Keio University and Senior Research Fellow, Japan Center for Economic Research
Former Minister of State for Economic and Fiscal Policy

Takashi Terada

Professor of International Relations
Waseda University


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