Obama and Trump administration policies During the presidency of
Barack Obama (with Joe Biden as
vice president), the United States negotiated a trade proposal with twelve
Pacific Rim countries that would become known as the
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). In 2015, the Obama administration pitched the proposal as a means to promote American economic interests in the region in the face of a
rising China. Following his election in
2016 and subsequent inauguration, then-President
Donald Trump issued an executive order pulling the United States out of the TPP, which had not been ratified by Congress. In 2018, the eleven remaining countries in the TPP went on to sign a revised version of the agreement, known as the
Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership.
Biden administration policy Prior to the launch of the IPEF, critics argued that the U.S. was engaged in an “all guns and no butter” strategy, in which defense was emphasized over regional economic policy. According to the
Financial Times, countries in the region urged the Biden administration to develop an international economic policy framework to combat China's influence. Analysts have compared it to the
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), which the
United States withdrew from in 2017. The Biden administration stated that it has no intention to join TPP's successor, the
Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership. The IPEF is intended to be a precursor for later negotiations, as it does not include a uniform lowering of
tariffs. On 22 May 2022, the Biden administration issued a 12-paragraph IPEF. The pact has been described as being "hollow", "meaningless" or "useless" by some commentators, including US industry groups, due to its lack of tangible policy actions such as lowering tariffs. Writing in 2022, academics Xinru Ma and David C. Kang described IPEF as lacking concrete proposals. The agreement establishes the Supply Chain Council, the Crisis Response Network and the Labor Rights Advisory Board to address supply chain resilience.
Clean Economy The Clean Economy Agreement was signed in June 2024, and entered into force on October 11, 2024. The agreement includes measures on developing and deploying clean energy and climate-friendly technologies, facilitating investment towards climate-related projects in the region, connecting markets through policies and standards, and promoting low-and zero-emission goods and services.
Fair Economy The Fair Economy Agreement was signed in June 2024, and entered into force on October 12, 2024. The agreement aims to prevent and combat corruption and to improve tax transparency and the exchange of information, domestic resource mobilization, and tax administration.
Trade In November 2023, the United States halted plans for the IPEF's trade component. The Biden administration had intended to conclude the negotiations during the
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, but reversed course following opposition from Democratic members of Congress including
Sherrod Brown. ==Participating nations==