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Tánaiste and Minister Troy publish major study on trade

Free Trade Agreements with Canada, South Korea, Mexico and Japan increase wages for Irish workers

 Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) with Canada, South Korea, Mexico and Japan will increase GDP and wages, especially for low-income workers, according to a major new trade study published today by the Tánaiste and Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment, Leo Varadkar TD, and Minister of State with responsibility for Trade Promotion Robert Troy TD.

 The independent examination, conducted by Copenhagen Economics, looked into the economic opportunities and effects for Ireland arising from four recently concluded EU Free Trade Agreements – Korea, Canada, Mexico and Japan.

 The Tánaiste said:

“Free trade agreements are good for workers, good for business, good for producers and good for consumers. This study shows how widespread and significant the benefits are for everyone of cutting out red tape and reducing friction in trade with other countries.

“Some countries, such as Norway, Australia and the Gulf States, use their rich natural resources to create employment and fund services and a good quality of life for their citizens. Ireland, however, has very little oil, gas or mineral wealth. For us, trade is the source of our economic growth. It is what has consistently raised our living standards over decades and created hundreds of thousands of jobs for our citizens.”

 Principal findings of the study:

  • Real wages are expected to increase between 2.6 and 4.4 per cent in 2030 due to the FTAs, with the largest increases found for low-income workers.
  • Imports are and will continue to become cheaper, reducing costs for consumers and Irish firms with global value chains.
  • Irish GDP will be 2.3 per cent higher in 2030 than would have been the case without the four FTAs in place.
  • The higher GDP is driven by an increase in global total Irish exports of 3.3 per cent and an increase in global imports of 3.3 per cent.
  • Increased market access benefits Irish exporters who can specialise in production, where they have a comparative advantage and are productive relative to competitors
  • As a small open economy with a limited home market, Irish producers will benefit more than producers in large countries who can gain scale in their home markets. 

The Tánaiste said:

 “These findings show that the Free Trade Agreements we have reached with Canada, Korea, Mexico and Japan will increase wages, especially for low-income workers, increase Ireland’s GDP, our national income and our productivity. Consumers are also better off as increased trade provides more choice and keeps prices competitive. For business, trade deals open up new and exciting markets, make doing business easier removing bureaucracy, tariffs, quotas and regulatory barriers. This is particularly important for SMEs, given that trade barriers tend to disproportionately burden smaller firms.

 “I am strongly committed to ensuring that the Government is doing everything possible to support businesses in Ireland to internationalise and diversify export markets, particularly in the context of the impacts of Brexit, to safeguard Irish jobs and investment.” 

 Ireland currently exports over €20bn in goods and services to the four specific FTA partners subject of this study, equivalent to almost six per cent of total Irish exports of goods and services in 2019. These markets are growing as significant export destinations for Ireland, with exports to these partners increasing by 270 per cent – almost threefold - over the last decade, over twice the rate of growth in total global Irish exports of 126 per cent in the same period.

 The study indicates early benefits are arising from the FTAs since their application. For example, exports to South Korea grew 19 per cent per year since 2015 and 22.8 per cent per year since 2017. Irish goods exports to Canada increased from €953 million in 2016 to more than €1.7 billion in 2020 (+78%) and services exports grew from €1.6 billion in 2016 to more than €2.3 billion in 2019 (+44%). 

 Minister for Trade Promotion, Robert Troy TD, added that:

 “As a small, open economy trade and investment is crucial to our recovery and future prosperity. The more we trade, the more jobs we support and the better the living standards for all.  

 “The best way to grow our exports and market diversification is by improving the terms of trade for Irish firms. The report highlights the significant benefits of the respective trade agreements, and it is important that we continue to secure greater market access for our exports and reduce the costs of entering those markets as we look to trade our way to a more favourable, post-pandemic, economic position.

 “I look forward to continued engagement with our dynamic Irish-based enterprises, especially SMEs, on maximising the potential of these markets and what other Free Trade Agreements offer.  Moreover, the European Commission’s “Access2Markets” portal should facilitate all companies, including our SMEs, in identifying the favourable tariff and quota arrangements that apply for their goods exports to these particular destinations.”

 

Note to Editors:

Find the full report at: Four EU Free Trade Agreements – Opportunities and Impacts for Ireland

 The study covers four recently completed Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) in varying stages of application and implementation.

  • EU-Korea FTA in force since 2011 and formally ratified in 2015.
  • The EU-Canada FTA (CETA) has been provisionally applied since September 2017. The majority of the provisions in the agreement are therefore in force now, with the exception of provisions relating to investment. 
  • The EU-Japan FTA (EU-Japan Economic Partnership Agreement) entered into force in February 2019 and tariff reductions on sensitive products are subject to a phasing period of up to seven years.
  • The EU and Mexico reached an agreement in principle on the trade part of a modernised EU-Mexico Global Agreement in April 2018. The new EU-Mexico FTA is in the process of being implemented and will replace a previous agreement between the EU and Mexico from 2000.