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Indonesia
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Indonesia cements membership of China-backed RCEP trade bloc

  • The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership is a ‘toll way’ that allows Indonesia to ‘storm the international markets’, its trade minister said
  • Indonesian lawmakers also ratified a bilateral trade pact with South Korea on Tuesday to try to attract electric-vehicle and battery investments

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Indonesian President Joko Widodo gestures as he delivers his annual state-of-the-nation speech to parliament earlier this month. Photo: Reuters
Reutersin Jakarta
Indonesia’s parliament on Tuesday passed a law cementing the country’s membership of the China-backed Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), making it the latest Southeast Asian nation to join the world’s biggest trade bloc.
Lawmakers also ratified a bilateral trade pact with South Korea, hoping to attract investment to develop the electric vehicle and batteries industry in the Southeast Asian country.

Indonesian Trade Minister Zulkifli Hasan said the RCEP would boost trade, direct investment and increase the country’s GDP growth by 0.07 percentage point.

“We describe this agreement as a toll way to enter the global market, and it is time for Indonesia to storm the international markets,” he told lawmakers.

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The RCEP, which is seen as an alternative to the US-led Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), covers nearly one-third of the world’s population and about 30 per cent of its gross domestic product. It was initially agreed by leaders of 15 Asia-Pacific countries in November 2020.
The pact, which does not include the United States, entered into force on January 1 this year after seven nations in Southeast Asia, and Australia, China, Japan, and New Zealand ratified the pact last year.

Under the agreement with South Korea, Jakarta and Seoul will eliminate more than 92 per cent and 95 per cent of tariff lines respectively. Indonesia will give preferential tariffs to support Korean investment in areas ranging from automobiles to apparel, Indonesia’s Trade Ministry said in a statement following the deal’s signing in 2020.

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