Press to join U.S.-led Indo-Pacific economic framework, business leaders urge Ottawa
WASHINGTON — There’s a four-letter F-word American leaders don’t much use these days when they talk about international trade: “free.”
Instead, President Joe Biden’s newest economic relationships in the Americas and the Indo-Pacific are described as “partnerships” and “frameworks” — an illustration of how politically toxic free trade has become in the U.S.
The latest is the Americas Partnership for Economic Prosperity, which Biden announced last week as he kicked off the Summit of the Americas, where leaders from 21 countries across the Western Hemisphere gathered, including Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
It was seen by some as a consolation prize of sorts following Biden’s unveiling in May of the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity, with some heavy hitters among its 13 founding partners, including India, Japan and Australia — together totalling some 40 per cent of global GDP.