In this increasingly uncertain and protectionist world, it is very heartening to read in the Singapore Straits Times that on 16th September, 14 countries announced an initiative committed to open, fair trade and enhancing investment flows. Now there's a thing...it might catch on! The Future of Investment and Trade (FIT) Partnership was launched alongside a joint declaration in support of a rules-based multilateral trading system, and reaffirming the vital role that foreign direct investment (FDI) plays in developing infrastructure, fostering international trade and enabling sustainable economic growth. The farsighted founding members are Brunei, Chile, Costa Rica, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Morocco, New Zealand, Norway, Panama, Rwanda, Singapore, Switzerland, the United Arab Emirates and Uruguay. The members pledged to develop “solutions-oriented initiatives” and their joint statement said: “The partnership seeks to be an “agile platform” for trade-related collaborations; this includes strengthening supply chains, removing non-tariff trade barriers, facilitating investment and integrating emerging technologies.” This comes as well publicised measures that restrict trade now risk fragmenting the global economy, dampening global economic growth and heightening inflationary and unemployment pressures. The FIT statement said: “For small and medium-sized countries that rely on open and fair trade with the world, the rules-based multilateral trading system is vital to our stability and prosperity.” The 14 leaders laid out the following objectives: -affirming the need for principles of open and fair trade, and adherence to the rules-based trading system - support for inclusive growth through enhancing access to resources and technology - addressing contemporary and emerging trade issues ; and - enhancing FDI flows with the aim of fostering greater and more sustainable growth. The FIT Partnership intends to adhere to a set of principles, which include minimising and removing “unnecessary barriers” to trade and investment, promoting transparency and predictability in trade and investment policies, and facilitating a level playing field. It’s hard to argue with any of these, even in the face of narrow self interest. The ministers also outlined 4 priorities: supply chain resilience; investment facilitation; non-tariff barriers and trade facilitation; and recognising trade technology as a horizontal enabler that can enhance progress across its priorities. A set of “concrete initiatives” are expected to be endorsed and announced at the inaugural FIT Partnership Ministerial Meeting from Nov 19 to 21. An important initiative that will hopefully integrate well with the 12 member countries in #CPTPP #internationaltrade #developinginfrastructure #adamsmith
14 Countries Launch FIT Partnership for Open Trade and Investment
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Fourteen countries from across continents on Tuesday (Sep 16) announced an initiative committed to open, fair trade and enhancing investment flows. https://bt.sg/xKes
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Fourteen nations have launched the Future of Investment and Trade (FIT) Partnership. The initiative will boost investment flows and promote inclusive, sustainable trade worldwide. Read more: https://lnkd.in/d-im4Kjt #Trade #Global #News #Investment
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A strategically elusive group of 14 primarily smaller economies worldwide, many in #EmergingMarkets, have assembled to form the Future of Investment and Trade (FIT) Partnership. Member countries include: *:Brunei * Chile * Costa Rica * Iceland * Liechtenstein * Morocco *:New Zealand * Norway * Panama * Rwanda * Singapore * Switzerland * United Arab Emirates (UAE), and * Uruguay Presumably, this collaboration of sorts is in response to the almost punishing new U.S. tariffs schedule initiated earlier this year. Details below. #GlobalBusiness
Singapore has joined with 13 other small and medium sized countries to create the Future of Investment and Trade Partnership (FITP). The idea is to get this group of countries to develop innovative approaches to support global trade and investment. The initial press release is vague on details, which might lead some to dismiss the initiative. But Singapore, Chile, and New Zealand have tried this before. The origins of the CPTPP and the Digital Economy Partnership Agreement (DEPA) were basically the same. It’s about getting a group of members together and loading them on a bus. The destination isn’t really known until the trip gets underway and the group has spent time figuring out what matters and what can realistically get done. At this very early stage, I don’t think the members are clear on outcomes, but they know that global trade needs fresh ideas and alternative pathways to get a trade system that is a better fit for today’s economies. I’m very much looking forward to the ministerial meeting in November and watching what develops.
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A strategically elusive group of 14 primarily smaller economies worldwide, many in #EmergingMarkets, have assembled to form the Future of Investment and Trade (FIT) Partnership. Member countries include: *:Brunei * Chile * Costa Rica * Iceland * Liechtenstein * Morocco *:New Zealand * Norway * Panama * Rwanda * Singapore * Switzerland * United Arab Emirates (UAE), and * Uruguay Presumably, this collaboration of sorts is in response to the almost punishing new U.S. tariffs schedule initiated earlier this year. Details below. #GlobalBusiness
Singapore has joined with 13 other small and medium sized countries to create the Future of Investment and Trade Partnership (FITP). The idea is to get this group of countries to develop innovative approaches to support global trade and investment. The initial press release is vague on details, which might lead some to dismiss the initiative. But Singapore, Chile, and New Zealand have tried this before. The origins of the CPTPP and the Digital Economy Partnership Agreement (DEPA) were basically the same. It’s about getting a group of members together and loading them on a bus. The destination isn’t really known until the trip gets underway and the group has spent time figuring out what matters and what can realistically get done. At this very early stage, I don’t think the members are clear on outcomes, but they know that global trade needs fresh ideas and alternative pathways to get a trade system that is a better fit for today’s economies. I’m very much looking forward to the ministerial meeting in November and watching what develops.
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Exciting to see the news overnight of the launch of an innovative new trade partnership for these challenging times: FIT-P, or the Future of Investment and Trade Partnership (though it must be said, the group's acronym game could do with some work). The initiative counts 14 members, including New Zealand, Singapore, United Arab Emirates, Switzerland and others from Europe, Latin America, Asia and Africa - showing that champions of open, connected and trade-friendly markets know no geographical bounds. This looks set to be another great example of 'concerted open plurilateralism' - a group of dynamic, small-to-mid-size, committed and creative economies demonstrating just what can be done with political will, agility and some great ideas. The Partnership will focus on four key enablers of modern trade and business models: 🌏 supply chain resilience 💰 investment facilitation 🚧 NTBs and trade facilitation 💻 and a welcome cross-cutting focus on tradetech The declaration also includes an important affirmation of these economies' commitment to the multilateral rules-based trading system, an open and fair trading environment, collaborative solutions and multistakeholder approaches. No doubt the business communities of these FIT-P countries will be eager to help co-design practical solutions across all four focus areas. Let's get this snowball rolling! Congratulations to New Zealand Minister for Trade and Investment Todd McClay, Singapore Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Trade, Gan Kim Yong, and their twelve colleagues and negotiating teams including New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs & Trade. Alison Hamilton Anna Curzon Sarah Ottrey Brett O'Riley Felicity Roxburgh https://lnkd.in/gQN5wGhb
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Small, medium-sized countries establish Future of Investment and Trade Partnership #bne #bneEditorsPicks #trade Fourteen countries have issued a joint declaration establishing the "Future of Investment and Trade (FIT) Partnership", a new international initiative committed to promoting open and fair trade, supporting inclusive growth and addressing contemporary and emerging trade issues, state news Emirates News Agency reported on September 17. The new grouping was announced at a virtual ministerial meeting attended by World Trade Organization (WTO) Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, via Zoom.
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#TTPulse: 14 Nations launch Future of Investment and Trade Partnership to support open markets 🔸Brunei, Chile, Costa Rica, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Morocco, New Zealand, Norway, Panama, Rwanda, Singapore, Switzerland, the United Arab Emirates, and Uruguay have established the Future of Investment and Trade (FIT) Partnership through a virtual Ministerial Meeting on 16th September 2025. The World Trade Organization (WTO) Director-General, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, also attended the launch. 🔸The initiative comes as the rules-based trading system faces growing pressure that risks fragmenting markets and slowing global growth. The partnership is designed to support open trade policies, especially for small, medium, and trade-dependent countries. 🔸The FIT Partnership will serve as a flexible and informal platform, bringing together public and private partners to address new challenges in three key areas: supply chain resilience, investment facilitation, and non-tariff barriers and trade facilitation, with trade technology as a supporting tool. 🔸The founding members released a joint statement outlining the Partnership's primary objectives, including maintaining open and fair trade, ensuring transparent and predictable trade policies, fostering equal opportunities for businesses, and promoting cross-border investment to drive economic growth. 🔸Singapore will host the first FIT Partnership Ministerial Meeting alongside the Bloomberg New Economy Forum in Singapore from 19-21 November 2025, where Ministers plan to announce specific initiatives. #tradepolicy #globaltrade #economiccooperation #FITPartnership #internationaltrade #investmentsupport
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This announcement of the Future of Investment and Trade (FIT) Partnership marks a significant and timely intervention in the evolving global trade landscape. At a moment when geopolitical fragmentation, economic nationalism, and the weaponization of trade threaten to undermine decades of progress under the multilateral rules-based system, the decision by 14 diverse nations—spanning Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East—to come together under a collective framework is both visionary and pragmatic. The 'participating economies—Brunei, Chile, Costa Rica, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Morocco, New Zealand, Norway, Panama, Rwanda, Singapore, Switzerland, the UAE, and Uruguay—' reflect a forward-looking coalition of trade-dependent, small, and medium-sized countries that recognize their shared interest in keeping markets open, predictable, and rules-oriented. Their size does not diminish their global relevance; instead, it amplifies the principle that inclusivity, cooperation, and agility are vital in shaping the next generation of trade and investment norms. The **core pillars of the FIT Partnership—supply chain resilience, investment facilitation, and non-tariff barrier reduction—**speak directly to the vulnerabilities exposed during the COVID-19 pandemic, the climate crisis, and recent geopolitical conflicts. These priorities show a keen awareness that sustainable growth in the 21st century cannot be achieved through tariff-centric debates alone; rather, it requires tackling the "new frontiers" of trade—digitalization, logistics resilience, technology integration, and cross-border investment flows. Notably, the inclusion of trade technology as a supporting tool underscores the recognition that the digital transformation of trade—from blockchain-enabled customs processes to AI-driven supply chain monitoring—will be indispensable in ensuring transparency, reducing transaction costs, and enabling SMEs to participate in global value chains. Equally important is the partnership’s diplomatic architecture: deliberately informal, flexible, and multi-stakeholder. This design avoids the bureaucratic inertia that can stymie more formal institutions, while allowing for agility, experimentation, and inclusivity. Yet, it also complements and strengthens, rather than undermines, the World Trade Organization (WTO), as emphasized by the presence of Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala at the launch. The upcoming Ministerial Meeting in Singapore (November 2025, alongside the Bloomberg New Economy Forum) will be a litmus test. It will need to translate the joint statement of intent into concrete initiatives—whether in digital trade protocols, climate-aligned investment standards, or innovative financing for supply chain resilience in vulnerable economies. If successful, the FIT Partnership could emerge as a blueprint for how middle-power and trade-dependent nations can safeguard openness and fairness in an increasingly polarized world.
#TTPulse: 14 Nations launch Future of Investment and Trade Partnership to support open markets 🔸Brunei, Chile, Costa Rica, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Morocco, New Zealand, Norway, Panama, Rwanda, Singapore, Switzerland, the United Arab Emirates, and Uruguay have established the Future of Investment and Trade (FIT) Partnership through a virtual Ministerial Meeting on 16th September 2025. The World Trade Organization (WTO) Director-General, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, also attended the launch. 🔸The initiative comes as the rules-based trading system faces growing pressure that risks fragmenting markets and slowing global growth. The partnership is designed to support open trade policies, especially for small, medium, and trade-dependent countries. 🔸The FIT Partnership will serve as a flexible and informal platform, bringing together public and private partners to address new challenges in three key areas: supply chain resilience, investment facilitation, and non-tariff barriers and trade facilitation, with trade technology as a supporting tool. 🔸The founding members released a joint statement outlining the Partnership's primary objectives, including maintaining open and fair trade, ensuring transparent and predictable trade policies, fostering equal opportunities for businesses, and promoting cross-border investment to drive economic growth. 🔸Singapore will host the first FIT Partnership Ministerial Meeting alongside the Bloomberg New Economy Forum in Singapore from 19-21 November 2025, where Ministers plan to announce specific initiatives. #tradepolicy #globaltrade #economiccooperation #FITPartnership #internationaltrade #investmentsupport
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The launch of the Future of Investment and Trade (FIT) Partnership marks a defining moment in global economic cooperation—particularly in an era where trade fragmentation, geopolitical uncertainty, and shifting investment patterns increasingly threaten the stability of the multilateral system. The fact that 14 diverse nations—spanning Asia, Africa, Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East—have coalesced around this initiative underscores both the urgency and the shared recognition that smaller, open, and trade-dependent economies cannot afford the luxury of isolationism. At its core, the FIT Partnership reflects a deliberate act of collective agency: smaller economies asserting their influence in shaping the rules, norms, and practices that will govern the next phase of global trade. The focus on supply chain resilience, investment facilitation, and non-tariff barriers speaks directly to the most pressing challenges of the 21st century. The COVID-19 pandemic, climate-related disruptions, and geopolitical shocks (such as the war in Ukraine and shifting U.S.–China dynamics) have all exposed the fragility of supply chains. Likewise, the proliferation of non-tariff barriers—often more restrictive than tariffs themselves—demands coordinated solutions to ensure predictability and fairness. Importantly, the FIT Partnership acknowledges technology as a trade enabler, positioning digitalization not as a peripheral tool but as a foundational driver of modern trade facilitation. In doing so, it aligns with broader debates at the WTO, OECD, and UNCTAD on how digital trade rules, data governance, and e-commerce can either reinforce inclusivity or exacerbate inequalities, depending on the governance structures adopted. The presence of WTO Director-General Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala at the launch lends symbolic and substantive weight to the initiative, signaling alignment with multilateral trade norms even as the FIT Partnership remains a flexible, informal platform. This “complementary multilateralism” could prove crucial in revitalizing faith in a rules-based system by showing that innovation and inclusivity can coexist with established institutions. Looking ahead, the first Ministerial Meeting in Singapore (November 2025) will be a litmus test: whether the FIT Partnership can move from rhetoric to concrete, measurable initiatives. Success will be determined by its ability to (a) reduce real-world frictions for SMEs, (b) catalyze cross-border investment flows into both emerging and established markets, and (c) institutionalize transparency and predictability in an era defined by uncertainty. In a world where polarization increasingly undermines cooperative frameworks, the FIT Partnership offers a timely, pragmatic, and forward-looking response—one that recognizes that the future of trade will not be safeguarded by the largest economies alone, but by coalitions of states willing to defend openness, fairness, and shared prosperity.
#TTPulse: 14 Nations launch Future of Investment and Trade Partnership to support open markets 🔸Brunei, Chile, Costa Rica, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Morocco, New Zealand, Norway, Panama, Rwanda, Singapore, Switzerland, the United Arab Emirates, and Uruguay have established the Future of Investment and Trade (FIT) Partnership through a virtual Ministerial Meeting on 16th September 2025. The World Trade Organization (WTO) Director-General, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, also attended the launch. 🔸The initiative comes as the rules-based trading system faces growing pressure that risks fragmenting markets and slowing global growth. The partnership is designed to support open trade policies, especially for small, medium, and trade-dependent countries. 🔸The FIT Partnership will serve as a flexible and informal platform, bringing together public and private partners to address new challenges in three key areas: supply chain resilience, investment facilitation, and non-tariff barriers and trade facilitation, with trade technology as a supporting tool. 🔸The founding members released a joint statement outlining the Partnership's primary objectives, including maintaining open and fair trade, ensuring transparent and predictable trade policies, fostering equal opportunities for businesses, and promoting cross-border investment to drive economic growth. 🔸Singapore will host the first FIT Partnership Ministerial Meeting alongside the Bloomberg New Economy Forum in Singapore from 19-21 November 2025, where Ministers plan to announce specific initiatives. #tradepolicy #globaltrade #economiccooperation #FITPartnership #internationaltrade #investmentsupport
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Trade is a path to prosperity. The #B20SouthAfrica Trade & Investment Task Force recommendations set out how to restore global trade stability, unlock a new trade and investment deal for Africa and build climate-responsive systems that drive inclusive growth. Read the B20 Final Paper: https://lnkd.in/g7Nm93XE. #TradeandInvestment #G20 #LedFromAfrica #HandoverOfB20Recommendations
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