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Argentina Seeks to Join Trans-Pacific Partnership Treaty, Minister Says

June 2 (Reuters) – Argentine ⁠Foreign ⁠Minister Pablo Quirno ⁠said on Tuesday the ​country intends to join the Comprehensive ‌and Progressive Agreement for ‌Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) and ⁠will ⁠present its application on Wednesday in Paris.

The ​CPTPP is a free trade accord among 12 countries. It was ​first established in 2018 among Australia, ⁠Brunei, Canada, ⁠Chile, Japan, ⁠Malaysia, Mexico, ​New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam. ​Britain joined ⁠in 2024 and China also hopes to join.

Argentina’s plans to join the pact follow ⁠its backing for other trade deals in recent ⁠months, including a reciprocal trade and investment agreement with the United States and the Mercosur-European Union agreement.

“We will continue to make rapid progress on these agreements,” Quirno said ⁠during a virtual address to the 43rd Congress of the Argentine Institute of Finance Executives.

(Reporting ​by Natalia Siniawski, Editing by ​Daina Beth Solomon)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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