Trade negotiators from the United States and 11 other Pacific nations failed to reach final agreement, with difficult talks on the largest regional trade agreement ever deadlocking over protections for drug companies and access to agriculture markets on both sides of the Pacific.
Trade ministers, in a joint statement, said they had made "significant progress" and will return to their home countries to obtain high-level signoffs for a small number of final sticking points on the agreement, the Trans-Pacific Partnership, with bilateral talks reconvening soon.
"There are an enormous number of issues that one works through at these talks, narrowing differences, finding landing zones," said Michael B. Froman, the United States trade representative. "I am very impressed with the work that has been done. I am gratified by the progress that has been made."
Still, the breakdown is a setback for the Obama administration, which had promoted the talks here as the final round ahead of an accord that would bind 40 per cent of the world's economy under a new set of rules for commerce.
President Obama's trade push had been buoyed by Congress's narrow passage in June of so-called fast track trade negotiating powers, and American negotiators had hoped other countries could come together once Congress had given up the right to amend any final agreement.
In the end, a deal filled with 21st-century policies on Internet access, advanced pharmaceuticals and trade in clean energy foundered on issues that have bedevilled international trade for decades: access to dairy markets in Canada, sugar markets in the United States and rice markets in Japan.
"No, we will not be pushed out of this agreement," said a defiant New Zealand trade minister, Tim Groser, who held out for better access for his country, the largest exporter of dairy in the world.
Australia, Chile and New Zealand also continue to resist the push by the United States to protect the intellectual property of major pharmaceutical companies for as long as 12 years, shielding them from generic competition as they recoup the cost of developing next-generation biologic medicines.
"There's always been more than one issue," said Representative Sander Levin, Democrat of Michigan, who is here as an observer.
The trade ministers who gathered at the luxury hotels of Maui this week for talks that went deep into the night did have some successes. They reached agreement on broad environmental protections for some of the most sensitive, diverse and threatened ecosystems on Earth, closing one of the most contentious chapters of the Pacific accord.
They also reached agreement on how to label exports with distinct "geographic indications," such as whether sparkling wine can be called champagne. And they agreed on a code of conduct and rules against conflicts of interest for arbitrators who would serve on extrajudicial tribunals to hear complaints from companies about whether their investments were unfairly damaged by government actions.
But the failure to complete the deal - eight years in the making - means the next round of negotiations will push the United States ratification fight into 2016, a presidential election year. Most Republican candidates are very likely to back it, but a final agreement would force the Democratic front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton to declare her position, which she has avoided.
This week, she told reporters, "I did not work on TPP" as secretary of state, although she gave a 2012 speech in Australia declaring the accord "the gold standard in trade agreements."
The push for the Pacific deal has already split most Democrats from their president. Further delay raises the prospect that a deal sealed by President Obama might have to be ratified by his successor, just as George H W Bush's North American Free Trade Agreement was secured by Bill Clinton.
The failure of the Maui talks pointed to the extreme difficulty of reaching agreement with so many countries, each with its own political dynamics. Vietnam, Malaysia and New Zealand were willing to make significant concessions to gain access to United States markets.
But with Canada's prime minister, Stephen Harper, fighting for his political life ahead of national elections in October, Canada would not budge on opening its poultry and dairy markets.
Chile, with a new, left-of-center government and existing free trade agreements with each of the countries in the Pacific deal, including the United States, saw no reason to compromise, especially on its demand for a short window of protection for United States pharmaceutical giants.
Australia's delegation insisted that pharmaceutical market protections beyond five years would never get through Parliament, and the United States team was demanding 12.
Ildefonso Guajardo, Mexico's secretary of economy, was defiant on the hard line he took against the export of Japanese cars with any less than 65 percent of their parts from TPP countries. "I am fighting for the interests of my country," he said.
Trade ministers, in a joint statement, said they had made "significant progress" and will return to their home countries to obtain high-level signoffs for a small number of final sticking points on the agreement, the Trans-Pacific Partnership, with bilateral talks reconvening soon.
"There are an enormous number of issues that one works through at these talks, narrowing differences, finding landing zones," said Michael B. Froman, the United States trade representative. "I am very impressed with the work that has been done. I am gratified by the progress that has been made."
Still, the breakdown is a setback for the Obama administration, which had promoted the talks here as the final round ahead of an accord that would bind 40 per cent of the world's economy under a new set of rules for commerce.
President Obama's trade push had been buoyed by Congress's narrow passage in June of so-called fast track trade negotiating powers, and American negotiators had hoped other countries could come together once Congress had given up the right to amend any final agreement.
In the end, a deal filled with 21st-century policies on Internet access, advanced pharmaceuticals and trade in clean energy foundered on issues that have bedevilled international trade for decades: access to dairy markets in Canada, sugar markets in the United States and rice markets in Japan.
"No, we will not be pushed out of this agreement," said a defiant New Zealand trade minister, Tim Groser, who held out for better access for his country, the largest exporter of dairy in the world.
Australia, Chile and New Zealand also continue to resist the push by the United States to protect the intellectual property of major pharmaceutical companies for as long as 12 years, shielding them from generic competition as they recoup the cost of developing next-generation biologic medicines.
"There's always been more than one issue," said Representative Sander Levin, Democrat of Michigan, who is here as an observer.
The trade ministers who gathered at the luxury hotels of Maui this week for talks that went deep into the night did have some successes. They reached agreement on broad environmental protections for some of the most sensitive, diverse and threatened ecosystems on Earth, closing one of the most contentious chapters of the Pacific accord.
They also reached agreement on how to label exports with distinct "geographic indications," such as whether sparkling wine can be called champagne. And they agreed on a code of conduct and rules against conflicts of interest for arbitrators who would serve on extrajudicial tribunals to hear complaints from companies about whether their investments were unfairly damaged by government actions.
But the failure to complete the deal - eight years in the making - means the next round of negotiations will push the United States ratification fight into 2016, a presidential election year. Most Republican candidates are very likely to back it, but a final agreement would force the Democratic front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton to declare her position, which she has avoided.
This week, she told reporters, "I did not work on TPP" as secretary of state, although she gave a 2012 speech in Australia declaring the accord "the gold standard in trade agreements."
The push for the Pacific deal has already split most Democrats from their president. Further delay raises the prospect that a deal sealed by President Obama might have to be ratified by his successor, just as George H W Bush's North American Free Trade Agreement was secured by Bill Clinton.
The failure of the Maui talks pointed to the extreme difficulty of reaching agreement with so many countries, each with its own political dynamics. Vietnam, Malaysia and New Zealand were willing to make significant concessions to gain access to United States markets.
But with Canada's prime minister, Stephen Harper, fighting for his political life ahead of national elections in October, Canada would not budge on opening its poultry and dairy markets.
Chile, with a new, left-of-center government and existing free trade agreements with each of the countries in the Pacific deal, including the United States, saw no reason to compromise, especially on its demand for a short window of protection for United States pharmaceutical giants.
Australia's delegation insisted that pharmaceutical market protections beyond five years would never get through Parliament, and the United States team was demanding 12.
Ildefonso Guajardo, Mexico's secretary of economy, was defiant on the hard line he took against the export of Japanese cars with any less than 65 percent of their parts from TPP countries. "I am fighting for the interests of my country," he said.
©2015 The New York Times News Service