Asia & Pacific

Since the early 2000s, there has been a significant shift in the free trade and investment landscape due to bilateral and regional agreements. While early regional integration patterns were established by foundational agreements, like the China-ASEAN Free Trade Agreement (2002), the South Asian Free Trade Agreement (SAFTA, 2004), the Korea-US FTA (2007), the Japan-ASEAN Economic Partnership Agreement (2008), the India-ASEAN FTA (2009) and the ASEAN-Australia-New Zealand Free Trade Agreement (AANZFTA, 2010), recent developments have greatly expanded the scope and impact of these frameworks.

The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) and the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), implemented in 2022 and 2018 respectively, have created the world's two largest trading blocs, accounting for about 30% and 15% of global GDP. Not only these agreements have reduced tariffs and streamlined customs procedures, they have also established advanced frameworks for digital trade, intellectual property protection, and investment facilitation. However this expansion has generated substantial concerns among civil society organizations regarding democratic deficits, transparency, sovereignty erosion, and the prioritisation of corporate interests over public welfare. Civil society organisations (CSOs) across the region have consistently criticised these agreements for their potential negative impacts on developing countries. Experts raised concerns about implications of RCEP for food security, access to medicines, labour rights, and environmental protection.

China has been actively seeking bilateral trade and investment deals. It is a member of RCEP, has signed about 25 FTAs, with another dozen under negotiation. China is also a party to over a hundred bilateral investment treaties. These agreements are a key element of its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), a global infrastructure project covering transport, the digital economy, energy and agriculture.

Bangladesh has emerged as a new player and has been rushing to sign trade deals in anticipation of graduating from least developed country (LDC) status. This has been criticised by CSOs that are concerned about the long-term implications for the lives and livelihoods of Bangladeshi people. Bangladesh is currently negotiating trade deals with around a dozen countries, including ASEAN states such as Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia, the EU and the United Arab Emirates. The country is also seeking to join RCEP. In 2026, it signed trade deals with Japan and the US.

The European Union has intensified its FTAs in Asia including those with Vietnam, Japan, Singapore and Indonesia (expected to be implemented in 2027). There are also ongoing negotiations with Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand, focusing on digital trade, green technology, and sustainable development. In South Asia, the EU and India concluded negotiations on a comprehensive FTA in January 2026, targeting over 90% tariff elimination on goods and covering 96-99% of bilateral trade. For India, this also forms part of its strategy of redefining the map of global trade with nine trade deals having been signed since the COVID crisis. With Sri Lanka, the EU continues to trade under the Generalised Scheme of Preferences, which allows preferential access to the European market, contingent on adherence to human rights and environmental standards. Aside from the EU, several Asian countries signed FTA with the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) which comprises Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland. These include India, Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore, while negotiations are ongoing with Vietnam, and Thailand concluded talks in 2025.

In the Asia region, Canada is also actively expanding its trade hegemony in Asia through key agreements and ongoing negotiations. For example, the Canada-Indonesia Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) is set to take effect in 2026, while negotiations for the ASEAN-Canada Free Trade Agreement have been underway since 2021, targeting all ten ASEAN member states. Talks are also in progress for a Canada-Philippines FTA, while negotiations for a Canada-India CEPA, initiated in 2010, will relaunch in 2026.

The trade war between the US and China under Trump marked a shift towards aggressive economic policies. The US administration used tariffs – justified by national security and unfair practices – to pressure countries across the region. The US has used trade like of a typical neocolonical power, leveraging tariff threats to extract unilateral concessions and reshape national regulatory frameworks in favour of US interests and corporations. Indonesia, Malaysia, Bangladesh, Taiwan and Cambodia faced pressure to grant market access and sign “agreements on reciprocal trade”, triggering domestic backlash over sovereignty.

In the Pacific, Australia and New Zealand have been the most active in signing trade agreements. Both are members of the CPTPP and the RCEP, and have FTAs with China, the EU and India. They have also pushed for the Pacific Agreement on Closer Economic Relations Plus (PACER Plus) with Pacific island countries. However, this has been criticised by civil society groups and some governments for favouring the two countries. Papua New Guinea and Fiji have therefore refused to join. Pacific island countries have also negotiated an economic partnership agreement with the EU, but only Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Samoa and the Solomon Islands have implemented it.

Across the region, diverse social movements have developed sophisticated strategies to challenge free trade and investment agreements. These movements include peasant organisations, labour unions, indigenous groups, women's organisations, and environmental activists who have formed regional coalitions to share information, coordinate actions, and amplify their voices.

Last update: May 2026


China, Africa set up new partnership, sign trade deals
China and Africa have signed trade deals worth 1.9 billion dollars on the final day of a historic summit that saw the Asian giant deepen economic and political ties with the resource-rich continent.
US wants APEC-wide free trade pact: report
The United States has sounded out its Asian and Pacific partners on the possibility of creating a regional free trade agreement as a ‘middle- and long-term' objective, a press report said on Sunday.
KMP threatens boycott of Japanese products: Farmers' group urges Japan not to push through with JPEPA
The Japanese government will send its big commercial fishing vessels to the Philippines' most productive fishing grounds in search of yellowfin tuna and skip jack instead of importing it directly from the Philippines under the controversial trade pact between the two countries.
Thailand negotiating FTA w/ Peru
Thailand will press forward in negotiating the free trade area (FTA) agreement with Peru, hoping to promote the export sector and create gateways to Brazil and Argentina.
Panelists want eight more FTAs, no farm snags
Four private-sector members of Japan's key governmental economic panel insist that Tokyo should triple the number of its FTA partners in two years.
US-Malaysia trade talks may not meet US deadline -- US official
Malaysia and the United States have made good progress towards forging a free trade deal, but negotiations may fail to meet Washington's deadline to sign a pact, a senior US trade official said.
JPEPA will allow Japan to exploit RP's tuna resources--group
A militant coalition of fishermen groups protested the Japan-Philippines Economic Partnership Agreement (JPEPA) as it will allow Japanese transnational fishing companies to corner the country's tuna resources.
ASEAN's new charter: Don't look now
It could be the most significant development for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) since it was established in 1967. Yet few among the regional bloc's 550 million people are even aware that they are about to have a charter for closer cooperation and economic integration.
RP ready to engage US in sectoral bilateral free trade talks
The Philippines is ready to officially engage the US on a possible sectoral bilateral free trade agreement, Trade and Industry Secretary Peter B. Favila said Thursday.
South Korea seeks free trade talks with EU, China next year: president
South Korea wants to open free trade talks with the European Union and China as soon as next year, President Roh Moo-Hyun said.

Referenced sites

Occupy TPPA

The Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) is a mega-treaty across nine or more countries. If the negotiations succeed they will put a straightjacket on ...

Our World Is Not For Sale (New Zealand)

The OUR WORLD IS NOT FOR SALE campaign was formed around building the protests at the September 2007 US-NZ Partnership Forum, the global justice campaign aim...

Pakistan FTAs

Webpage maintained by the Ministry of Commerce

PANG

The Pacific Network on Globalisation (PANG) plays the role of the Pacific regional “peoples’ watchdog on trade issues”.

RCEP Legal

Legal documents and analyses relating to the Regional Economic Comprehensive Partnership (RCEP)

Rock against the TPP

Join us for a nationwide uprising and concert tour to stop the biggest corporate power grab in history: the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

SAARC Secretariat

The South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) comprises the seven South Asian countries of Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, the Maldives, Nepal, Pak...

Singapore's FTAs website

Singapore's FTAs website, with documents and news of latest developments.

Stop TPP Action

Japanese alliance website

TAFTA at DFAT

Australian government's Thailand-Australia FTA page