SENATOR THE HON PENNY WONG
Labor Senator for South Australia
JOEL FITZGIBBON MP
Member for Hunter
JOINT MEDIA RELEASE
25 March 2014
Prime
Minister Tony Abbott must guarantee Australia’s farmers that they will
benefit from genuine improvements in market access under any trade
agreement with Japan.
Rural Liberal MPs have raised concerns in the Coalition party room that dairy and beef producers will miss out because of the Prime Minister’s rush to sign a free trade agreement with Japan.
According to news reports, Liberal MPs said the Government was “getting nowhere” on beef and dairy in negotiations with Japan.
The MPs said the Prime Minister was willing to accept a downgraded “economic partnership agreement” rather than a genuine trade agreement with Japan.
A trade agreement with Japan represents a unique opportunity for Australian businesses – but only if the Abbott Government negotiates sound outcomes.
This opportunity must not be squandered by a Prime Minister rushing to sign a deal with Japan at any cost.
Coalition MPs have now caught up with Labor on this issue.
Labor’s concern remains that Mr Abbott will accept a second-rate agreement for the sake of getting a deal for his political trophy cabinet rather than negotiating real benefits for Australian exporters.
Australia needs a comprehensive, high-quality free trade agreement with Japan which improves market access for our agricultural and non-agricultural goods sectors and our services industries.
What is important is not the size of the delegation Mr Abbott takes to Japan but the quality of the deal he brings home.
Rural Liberal MPs have raised concerns in the Coalition party room that dairy and beef producers will miss out because of the Prime Minister’s rush to sign a free trade agreement with Japan.
According to news reports, Liberal MPs said the Government was “getting nowhere” on beef and dairy in negotiations with Japan.
The MPs said the Prime Minister was willing to accept a downgraded “economic partnership agreement” rather than a genuine trade agreement with Japan.
A trade agreement with Japan represents a unique opportunity for Australian businesses – but only if the Abbott Government negotiates sound outcomes.
This opportunity must not be squandered by a Prime Minister rushing to sign a deal with Japan at any cost.
Coalition MPs have now caught up with Labor on this issue.
Labor’s concern remains that Mr Abbott will accept a second-rate agreement for the sake of getting a deal for his political trophy cabinet rather than negotiating real benefits for Australian exporters.
Australia needs a comprehensive, high-quality free trade agreement with Japan which improves market access for our agricultural and non-agricultural goods sectors and our services industries.
What is important is not the size of the delegation Mr Abbott takes to Japan but the quality of the deal he brings home.
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