Abstract

In 2013, the European Union (EU) concluded its first comprehensive trade agreement with a Southeast Asian partner. The EU-Singapore agreement (EUSFTA) was meant as a blueprint for further negotiations in the region and indeed it was paralleled by trade talks between the EU and other members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). Given the significant challenges and roadblocks the EU faced in concluding both inter-regional and bilateral trade deals in Asia prior to the EUSFTA, the conclusion of this agreement can be understood as a significant success. However, this success has come at the cost of a shift in EU external relations away from the promotion of its own foundation norms of human rights, rule of law and democracy. This shift has had a deleterious effect on the EU’s legitimacy, founded on upholding these norms, both internally and in the Asian region. As a blueprint agreement, the EUSFTA can be analyzed to understand how this shift in the EU’s external relations will shape the EU’s wider trade policy in East Asia as well as the future of EU-Asia trade relations. This working paper will explore these negotiations and argue that the EU unbundled trade policy from its rights-based foreign policy in the EUSFTA. We argue that this creates significant opportunity for Singapore and other Asian states, but also presents a critical risk to the EU’s foundation norms, which were compromised in the EU’s negotiation of the EUSFTA.

Highlights

  • In 2013, the European Union (EU) concluded its first comprehensive trade agreement with a Southeast Asian partner

  • Negotiations for an free trade agreements (FTAs) with Singapore marked a major shift in EU trade policy and the use of conditionality, in human rights conditionality

  • The case of the EUSFTA negotiations highlights how the EU’s new trade agenda is putting these links under strain, and how, instead of a considered and strategic shift towards a new trade strategy concerning the intersection of trade policy and political objectives, individual negotiation dynamics can force the EU’s hand, resulting in concessions which have significant policy implications

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Summary

Global Governance Programme

Terms of access and reuse for this work are governed by the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CCBY 4.0) International license. If cited or quoted, reference should be made to the full name of the author(s), editor(s), the title, the working paper series and number, the year and the publisher. ISSN 1028-3625

Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies
The Global Governance Programme
Introduction*
Conditionality and EU trade policy
Conclusion
Full Text
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