A trilateral meeting among the trade chiefs of the United States, Japan and the EU held in New York committed the three World Trade Organization members to launch common initiatives to overhaul the Geneva-based institution. This trilateral format of meetings started with the aim to address common concerns on – …
EU trade policies
Blog: EU agri-food exports and imports mirror recent trade policies
The EU is currently the second largest agriculture and food exporter in the world after the United States. Its export performance has being going from strength to strength following successive reforms of the Common Agriculture Policy and as the emerging world grows richer. Even EU beef and sugar start finding …
UK food and farming sector faces severe trade disruption in ‘no deal’ Brexit
The UK government has released a third batch of technical ‘notices’ in which it sets out to businesses trading across the Irish Sea or English Channel the type and extent of paperwork it will face should Britain leave the European Union next March without an agreement that includes a transitional …
A Week in Brussels and Geneva: EU and Canada special
EU trade this week was heavy on WTO reform and China (here, here). Brexit was all over the headlines. But there are no actual new developments to report from the heads of government meeting in Austria with Prime Minister Theresa May this week. The Irish border issue remains unresolved, so …
Beyond Brussels: Countries vow to intensify WTO talks on fisheries aid
Any mention of the World Trade Organization these days usually includes the words “reform” or “Appellate Body”. While efforts to limit harmful fisheries subsidies aren’t making many big headlines right now, the good news is that they actually seem to be making some progress. That’s not to say a deal …
Blog: (South) East Asia round-up
There’s been a little bit of noise this week on EU trade files in relation to Asia. So here a short update.
China and the EU: The contradictions of exercising joint trade leadership
The EU and China know they must work together to show leadership in matters of global trade and investment. But realising effective cooperation with trade partners to make the system more robust and to withstand the “disruptive bilateralism originating from Washington” is easier said than done, argues Jacques Pelkmans.
China and EU remain ‘wide apart’ on trade and economy
After this summer’s successful EU-China summit, Brussels and Beijing are trying to find common ground on trade and investment as well as World Trade Organization reform. Yet despite an exchange of market access offers as part of ongoing investment talks, the two sides are finding it hard to bridge gaps. Worse, …
A week in Brussels: Mercosur, Africa, CETA
It’s been a big-ticket week in trade, kicked off by a meeting between the USTR and the EU’s trade commissioner on a possible ‘deal’, and two big reports adopted by the European Parliament on relations with the United States and with China. There was also some action on the Brexit …
Beyond Brussels: G20 eyes bland trade consensus as US, China seek reset
Trade ministers from the world’s top 20 economies will gather today in the coastal Argentine town of Mar del Plata to discuss issues such as e-commerce and inclusive global value chains in the agricultural sector. But there can be little doubt that the $500 billion firestorm brewing between the US …