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New Zealand and Australia discuss free trade with EU and others

New Zealand and Australia announced on Thursday that they were each working with other countries on a potential joint response to bolster free trade in the face of a barrage U.S. Tariffs.

Christopher Luxon, the New Zealand Prime Minister, said that he spoke with leaders from Singapore, Vietnam, and Malaysia as well as with the head of the executive of the European Union about international trade.

Luxon, in a speech he gave on Thursday, floated the idea that members of the European Union and Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership(CPTPP) could work together.

The global trade system has been upended after U.S. president Donald Trump announced last week sweeping tariffs on dozens countries. Some of these countries responded with retaliatory duties, causing massive volatility on the markets.

On Wednesday, Trump announced a dramatic reversal. He would suspend for 90 days the high tariffs that he had placed on many countries.

Penny Wong, Australian Foreign Minister, said that government ministers have held discussions with Southeast Asian countries, Japan, Korea and India about a possible joint response to Trump’s tariffs.

In an interview with ABC, she stated that "there is a group who sees the benefits of free, open and fair commerce."

Luxon stated in posts to X that he had separate phone conversations with Singapore Prime minister Lawrence Wong and Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh, as well as Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, about bolstering free trade based on rules to stimulate economic growth.

He also said that he spoke with Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission about "what EU and New Zealand could do together to support trade rules which underpin Kiwi jobs and New Zealand growth".

New Zealand, Singapore and Malaysia are all members of CPTPP. Other countries include Australia, Canada and Chile as well as Japan, Mexico, and Britain.

Luxon had earlier said in an address to the Wellington Chamber of Commerce that "one possibility" is that the CPTPP members and the European Union could work together to promote rules-based trading and make specific promises on how this support will be implemented in practice.

He said he will be heading to Britain in late April to meet with Prime Minister Keir starmer and discuss trade, geopolitical and security issues.

He said, "We cannot make the case for New Zealand by staying at home." "We must position ourselves to be advocates for both our economic interests and institutions that support them."

Trump has imposed 10% tariffs on Australia and New Zealand. This is the lowest of the levies he has for all imports to the U.S. Canberra, and Wellington both say they will not retaliate. Last year, about 12% of New Zealand and 5% Australia exports were sent to the U.S.

(source: Reuters)