After receiving backlash at home, President Joe Biden’s administration said on Monday that it will delay the release of a preliminary trade agreement with Asia, which was scheduled to be disclosed at a meeting in San Francisco. Biden was anticipated to make a significant announcement about significant progress on a tentative trade agreement when he welcomed 20 other members of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) conference to San Francisco, where he will meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping off-site. However, trade, the most controversial aspect of the so-called Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity (IPEF), still needs improvement, according to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen. “There’s been significant progress, but it looks not to be complete, like something that is likely to require further work,” she told reporters after leading talks of APEC finance ministers. “Nevertheless, in a number of areas that I think are critically important to the United States, like supply chains, environment, sustainable finance, we’ve made a huge amount of progress and we’ve made progress on trade too, but it appears not to be complete,” she said. IPEF falls well short of a traditional trade deal as it does not offer trade access. Nonetheless, it would aim to set standards for business across some 40 percent of the global economy including three of the world’s top five economies – the United States, Japan and India. IPEF also includes Australia, South Korea and much of Southeast Asia, but notably not China, as the United States tries again to assert a leadership role in Asia. Senator Sherrod Brown, a member of Biden’s Democratic Party close to labor unions, who faces reelection next year in battleground Ohio, on the eve of the summit called for the entire removal of trade from the IPEF. “Any trade deal that does not include enforceable labor standards is unacceptable,” Brown said. The Democrats enjoy only a slender majority in the Senate and some in the party fear IPEF could be a replay of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a more ambitious trade deal that former president Barack Obama pitched to Asian allies. Donald Trump denounced that deal as ignoring US workers’ interests and pulled out immediately after entering the White House in 2017.
Biden was anticipated to make a significant announcement about significant progress on a tentative trade agreement when he welcomed 20 other members of the APEC conference to San Francisco, where he will meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping off-site
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