Looking back, it is hard to recall a greater diplomatic achievement than the comprehensive trade and investment agreement that will be signed by representatives of 12 countries in Auckland today. The post-war creation of the United Nations in which New Zealand Prime Minister Peter Fraser played a role may be as proud for those who remember it. The Trans-Pacific Partnership is directly in that tradition.
It represents another advance on the principles of the World Trade Organisation, formerly the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (Gatt) that was one of the multi-lateral institutions formed by nations seeking world peace and prosperity after two devastating wars.
Even 70 years ago, it proved harder to unite the world on rules for international business and trade than to establish a World Health Organisation and UN agencies for the likes of education and science. The Gatt did not become the WTO until the 1990s when just about all countries in the long communist experiment finally turned to capitalism for the prosperity the West enjoyed. Countries of the former Eastern and non-aligned blocs joined the WTO in droves and its first attempt at a negotiating round stalled on procedures allowed nothing to be agreed unless everything on the agenda was agreed.
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In the wake of Doha, open trading countries looked to bilateral and regional free trade agreements to lower barriers to business and develop fair rules. But unless these agreements were open to all countries that could agree, they could do more harm than good, channelling trade more narrowly. That is what was beginning to happen when New Zealand, with Singapore, Chile and Brunei, made a pact open to more members around the Pacific.