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Argentina · Trade
Key Facts
—The move: Argentina formally applied on June 3 to join the CPTPP, the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, lodging its candidacy with New Zealand, the pact’s depositary.
—The bloc: The CPTPP groups 12 economies — including Japan, Canada, Mexico, the UK, Chile and Vietnam — accounting for roughly 13% of world GDP and about 15% of global goods trade.
—The architect: Foreign Minister Pablo Quirno announced the step at a Buenos Aires finance congress, casting it as part of President Javier Milei’s drive to open a long-closed economy.
—The context: The bid joins a February reciprocal-trade accord with the United States and the recently in-force Mercosur-European Union deal, alongside talks with Singapore, Canada and the EFTA states.
—The caveat: Accession is not immediate — the process can take two to five years and requires all current members to agree to open negotiations — and comes as Argentine industry reports months of contraction.
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Argentina has formally knocked on the door of one of the world’s largest free-trade blocs, deepening President Javier Milei’s bet that openness, not protection, is the path out of decades of stagnation.
Argentina’s CPTPP application explained
Argentina presented its formal request to join the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership on June 3, delivering the candidacy to New Zealand, which acts as the treaty’s depositary. The CPTPP brings together 12 Pacific-rim economies — Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United Kingdom and Vietnam — representing close to 13% of global output and around 15% of world goods trade, making it one of the largest free-trade areas on the planet.
Foreign Minister Pablo Quirno announced the step at the annual congress of the Argentine Institute of Finance Executives in Buenos Aires. He framed the application as a break with the country’s historic trade posture, arguing that Argentina had spent decades as a closed economy “looking at its own navel,” with producers shielded behind few and expensive products. “The market for Argentina is the world, not just Argentina, and that is where we are going,” he said, crediting Milei‘s economic team with the fiscal stabilisation he argues makes the opening possible.
A widening trade-opening strategy under Milei
The CPTPP bid is one piece of a fast-moving agenda. Quirno linked it to the reciprocal trade and investment accord Argentina signed with the United States in February — a deal covering tariffs, non-tariff barriers, intellectual property, critical minerals and agricultural market access — and to the Mercosur-European Union agreement, which entered into force this year after more than two decades of negotiation. He also pointed to a Mercosur-Singapore agreement and continuing talks with Canada and the EFTA group of Switzerland, Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein. For a government that has made deregulation and external integration central to its identity, each step reinforces the same message to investors: Argentina intends to compete in global markets rather than wall itself off from them.
Argentina’s pitch leans on its natural-resource base — agriculture, energy and critical minerals such as lithium — and the argument that predictable, rules-based market access will draw the investment needed to develop them. Joining the CPTPP would widen access to wealthy economies where Argentina currently lacks trade agreements and could improve its position in global value chains.
The hurdles and the domestic backdrop
The path is neither quick nor guaranteed. Accession to the CPTPP is a multi-year process that can run from two to five years, and every existing member must agree to open negotiations with the candidate before talks can even begin. There is also a regional dimension: Argentina is a member of Mercosur, whose common external tariff and bloc-level commitments have historically complicated members’ individual trade deals — tensions visible when Uruguay sought CPTPP entry. Analysts note the opening would also need legislative accompaniment at home to avoid leaving the executive exposed.
The timing is pointed. The application comes as the Argentine Industrial Union has recorded its fifteenth consecutive month in contraction territory, and as small and medium manufacturers warn they are unprepared for unfettered foreign competition — the visible cost of the same trade-opening that has helped stabilise the peso and bring inflation down. For Milei, the CPTPP bid is both an economic instrument and a political signal: a marker of the outward-facing model he is asking Argentines, and investors, to bet will outlast the country’s long history of reversed reforms.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the CPTPP?
The Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, a free-trade bloc of 12 economies representing about 13% of world GDP and 15% of global goods trade.
What did Argentina do?
It formally applied on June 3 to begin the accession process, lodging its candidacy with New Zealand, the pact’s depositary, under Foreign Minister Pablo Quirno.
How long would joining take?
Accession can take two to five years, and all existing members must agree to open negotiations before talks begin. Membership is not guaranteed.
How does it fit Milei’s strategy?
It extends a rapid trade-opening drive that includes a US reciprocal accord and the Mercosur-EU deal, central to Milei’s push to integrate Argentina into global markets.
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