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The global economy has become fragmented, and an important cause has been the inability of international trade and finance governance institutions to adapt to changing realities. However, Canada has a unique opportunity to help repair today’s global trading system.

This year, the country is chairing the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership Commission. The CPTPP is a free-trade agreement between Canada and 10 other countries in the Indo-Pacific (Australia, Brunei, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam).

The commission’s role includes considering new applicants and setting the standards they must meet. As chair, Canada can help move the global economy back along a path toward a more open, rules-based trading system.

Efforts to renew existing global institutions to better reflect current economic realities are important. They are key to promoting the benefits of trade and investment among economies. Nurturing new institutions such as the CPTPP and promoting broad accession to it are effective ways to counter global economic fragmentation caused by the rapid rise in tariffs, restrictions and beggar-thy-neighbour policies of the past few years.

A “next generation” trade agreement, the CPTPP takes World Trade Organization rules a step further in key areas such as electronic commerce, intellectual property and state-owned enterprises, and its expansion would help strengthen global trade rules, deepen economic co-operation on trade and sustain an open global trading system.

The benefits for Canada specifically are further export-market diversification and greater ties with the fast-expanding markets of the Indo-Pacific region. Further, helping today’s global economy is a key opportunity that will carry over when Canada welcomes the G7 summit in 2025.

Bottom line: Broadening the CPTPP offers the prospect of strengthening global governance and addressing common economic challenges for members and for the global economy writ large, while expanding Canada’s markets.

Notably, a half-dozen countries have applied to join the CPTPP. One of which is China, whose entry would boost global GDP by $600-billion annually, representing an increase in global incomes of more than 0.5 per cent.

However, there’s a catch. The challenge for both Canada and subsequent commission chairs is to ensure that China agrees to meet the high standards members have maintained so far.

This high bar includes member countries eliminating or substantially reducing tariffs and other trade barriers; strong commitments to opening their markets; abiding by strict rules and protection of foreign companies; and operating within, as well as helping to promote, a predictable, comprehensive framework in digital trade flows.

For accession, China would need to demonstrate that a socialist market economy can be consistent with fair trade. The applications of both China and Taiwan also represent a particularly challenging area to navigate, but not an insuperable one given they are both members of other organizations such as APEC.

If the U.S. were to also join the CPTPP, it would gain from preferential access to growing Pacific Rim markets, in particular that of China’s services sector. But it would need to step well back from its current mercantilist mindset, which risks becoming worse. Therefore, both China and the U.S. joining are best viewed as long-term goals.

One of the most important goals for Canada’s chairmanship should be to clarify the rules of accession, which would be a big step forward in sustaining the CPTPP’s expansion.

Canada should help promote and accelerate the inclusion of Costa Rica, Uruguay, Ecuador, and Ukraine, all of whom have applied to the CPTPP. And it should help move forward discussions with South Korea, Indonesia, Philippines and Thailand, countries that have all expressed interest in joining.

In sum, as chair, Canada should champion discussion and understanding of the long-run goal of broad accession to the CPTPP.

Open and inclusive institutions are at the core of ensuring each economy can benefit from global economic integration, and the CPTPP is a landmark on the way forward.

Paul Jenkins is a senior fellow at the C.D. Howe Institute and former senior deputy governor of the Bank of Canada, while Mark Kruger holds senior fellow appointments at the Yicai Research Institute, the Centre for International Governance Innovation and the University of Alberta’s China Institute.