Two underlying challenges; Little can be expected from market liberalisation; Rule-making is the key area of “ambition”; Area of ambition 1: Enhancing investmentArea of ambition 2: Promoting e-commerce and digital tradeWhat to do with unfinished business?
- There are two significant challenges underlying the Japan-UK FTA negotiation: the EU-UK FTA and the timeframe
- Better market access than the EU-Japan EPA provides cannot be
expected from this negotiation except for some outstanding issues. This
is not only because of the extraordinarily short negotiating timeframe,
but because of other multi-layered reasons. The UK is already enjoying a
high degree of market liberalisation in the EU-Japan EPA. Also, the
UK’s bargaining power is limited due to its market size relative to
Japan’s. What is more, MFN provisions in the EU-Japan EPA prevent Japan
from conceding higher levels of liberalisation to the UK than to the EU
both in goods and services.
- Accordingly, rule-making will play a pivotal role if the parties are
to achieve a “EU-Japan EPA-plus” agreement. Given the unprecedentedly
short negotiating timeframe, the scope of “ambition” has to be narrowed.
- For the UK, maintaining current Japanese investment and attracting
future investment is vital for job creation, innovation and regional
inclusiveness. It should be a UK priority to design the Japan-UK FTA so
that it can stimulate investment, creating a comprehensive investment
chapter which covers investment liberalisation, protection and dispute
settlement..
- Creating a comprehensive chapter on e-commerce and digital trade should be another highlight of the Agreement.
Introduction
The Japanese and UK governments launched a bilateral trade negotiation on 9th June 2020 to create an “ambitious, high standard and mutually beneficial” Free Trade Agreement (FTA) based on the EU-Japan EPA.[2]
The parties are aiming to conclude the FTA by the end of the
post-Brexit transition period on 31 December and make a swift transition
from the EU-Japan Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) on 1st January 2021 so as not to interrupt business.
Although the political incentive to achieve the FTA is mounting on
both sides, there is a lack of in-depth multi-disciplinary analysis
which captures the whole picture of the negotiations. This paper aims to
examine the issues we should consider when assessing its value. First, I
argue that there are two key underlying challenges for this
negotiation. Then I discuss what should be prioritised to make the
Japan-UK FTA ambitious, taking into account the unprecedented short
negotiating timeframe. Lastly, I address a few other outstanding issues
and propose a possible mechanism to cope with unfinished business in
order to make the agreement truly valuable from the long-term point of
view.
Two underlying challenges
There are two significant challenges underlying the Japan-UK FTA
negotiation. The first is that the Japan-UK FTA on its own cannot
reflect the EU-Japan-UK trilateral relationship. Although the Japan-UK
FTA negotiation is a completely independent bilateral negotiation from
the EU-UK future relations, the EU-UK FTA does matter for business
because the Japan-UK trade and investment relationship constitutes one
side of the EU-Japan-UK trilateral relationship. (Figure 1).
Figure 1: EU-Japan-UK trilateral relationship
This trilateral trade and investment relationship is the product of
Japanese and UK firms’ engagement in Global Value Chains (GVCs) and
supply chains in Europe. For Japanese business, this trilateral
relationship is particularly important. As widely known, since the
1980s, Japanese firms have established a business model in Europe of
using the UK as a hub for business in Europe or a gateway to the EU
market. The precondition of this business model was that the UK is an EU
member state. In other words, free movement of goods, services, people
and capital as a part of the EU Customs Union and the Single Market were
taken as granted.
The end of frictionless trade between the EU and the UK after the
Post-Brexit transition period directly impacts the current Japanese
business model. According to a survey, the top concern of Japanese
companies doing business in the UK and the EU is the EU-UK future
relationship. Notably, border frictions created by new border controls
and customs procedures; tariff rates; and ending the free movement of
people are listed as the factors that impact most heavily on Japanese
business in Europe, especially manufacturers. Given that these factors
threaten their day-to-day business, their interests in the Japan-UK FTA
are overshadowed.[3]
Of course, British firms also have far more at stake in the EU-UK FTA
than the Japan-UK FTA and ration their attention accordingly.
The second underlying challenge is to strike a balance between
“continuity” and “ambition”. The Japanese government expressed the
necessity to complete the bilateral negotiations by the end of July, in
order to fit the outcome into its domestic legislative process. This
means a negotiation timeframe is less than two months since the
negotiation has launched on 9th June. Even though the negotiation is based on the EU-Japan EPA, the negotiating timeframe is unprecedentedly short.
Both governments are currently negotiating a deal that prioritises
“continuity” because high-level political pressures for achieving
“continuity” are mounting. The UK government has recently conceded that a
UK-US FTA will not be concluded before the US Presidential election
this autumn despite the strong desire to make it a central in the
“Global Britain” agenda. [4]
Accordingly, striking a trade deal with Japan, the world’s
third-largest economy, is expected to be the first major FTA deal for
Post-Brexit Britain. For the Japanese government, there is strong
pressure from Japanese business to achieve a smooth policy transition
from the EU-Japan EPA to the Japan-UK FTA on 1st January 2021 in order to avoid business destructions.
On the other hand, Japan is wishing to pursue an “ambitious” FTA with
the UK. It was Japan that rejected rolling over the EU-Japan EPA. There
were two reasons for Japan’s rejection.[5]
One reason is that Japan wanted to achieve a higher level of
liberalisation and rule-making in the areas where Japan could not
reflect its interests when it negotiated the EPA with the EU. This
unfinished business for Japan includes immediate elimination of auto
tariffs; an innovative chapter on digital economy; and a comprehensive
investment chapter encompassing liberalisation, protection and dispute
settlement. The second reason was the domestic legislative procedure.
Even though Japan had concluded a “continuity agreement” with the UK
which completely replicated the EU-Japan EPA, the Agreement was regarded
as a new FTA. This means that it requires a formal approval procedure
to pass the Diet (Parliament) of Japan, which is always time-consuming
and not a straight-forward process. Once the continuity agreement is
approved, it would become almost impossible to renegotiate.
From the UK’s point of view, a great advantage of making a new FTA
with Japan is that it can directly reflect its economic interests. When
the EU-Japan EPA was negotiated, the UK interests were marginalised and
focus was given more to exports of agri-food products and processed
agricultural products, non-tariff barriers on goods (i.e. TBT, SPS) and
trade and sustainable issues. By creating a new FTA based on the
EU-Japan EPA, the UK could focus on its economic interests, such as
services trade and digital trade.
Little can be expected from market liberalisation
Then, in what way could both governments strike a balance between
“continuity” and the scope and level of “ambitions”? Trade negotiations
can be categorised into market access negotiations and rule-making. In
the case of the Japan-UK FTA, market liberalisation in goods and
services cannot be expected except for some outstanding issues, such as
accelerating the schedule of tariff eliminations and inclusion of
sectors currently exempted from the EPA.[6]
For example, Japan shows strong interest in the UK’s immediate
elimination of the auto tariffs (the current MFN tariff is 10%), which
are scheduled to be eliminated in eight years in the EU’s commitments.
In services, including audiovisual services, which is exempted from the
EU-Japan EPA, due to EU’s principle on protecting the diversity of
cultural expression, would be of mutual interest to Japan and the UK.
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