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AsiaDiplomacy

Count me in: Indonesian president Widodo endorses Obama’s Pacific trade pact

Indonesia had previously expressed interest in joining the TPP - but this is the strongest indication yet that it is serious about joining the pact, which the US has negotiated with 11 other nations.

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US President Barack Obama and his Indonesian hold talks in the Oval Office at the White House. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

US President Barack Obama has won Indonesia's endorsement for a contentious trans-Pacific trade deal, with the president of Southeast Asia's largest economy vowing to join.

During a meeting with Obama at the White House on Monday, Joko Widodo risked the ire of economic nationalists at home and pledged to join the pact.

“Indonesia is an open economy and with a population of 250 million, we are the largest economy in Southeast Asia,” Widodo said in the Oval Office.

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“Indonesia intends to join the TPP.”

Twelve countries are currently party to the “Trans-Pacific Partnership” - including Australia, Canada, Japan, Mexico, Vietnam and the United States - creating the world's largest free trade area.

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The trip by the Indonesian president, who was was elected in 2014 on a populist platform aimed at the rural poor, was aimed at making the case to business leaders that his country is open to American investment, though Widodo had to scrap a meeting in San Francisco to return to Indonesia.  Photo: AFP
The trip by the Indonesian president, who was was elected in 2014 on a populist platform aimed at the rural poor, was aimed at making the case to business leaders that his country is open to American investment, though Widodo had to scrap a meeting in San Francisco to return to Indonesia. Photo: AFP
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