From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Khòa Thài-pêng-iûⁿ Ha̍p-hóe (Trans-Pacific Partnership) sī Thài-pêng-iûⁿ sì-ûi 12 kok só͘ thê chhut ê bō͘-e̍k hia̍p-tēng. Chhōa-thâu ê 4 kok sī Brunei, Chile, Niú-se-lân kap Sin-ka-pho, chho͘-kî ka-ji̍p hia̍p-gī ê kok-ka koh ū Australia, Canada, Ji̍t-pún, Má-lâi-se-a, Mexico, Peru, Bí-kok kap Oa̍t-lâm.
Leaders from 10 of the 12 prospective member states at a TPP summit in 2010 | |
Type | Trade agreement |
---|---|
Drafted | 2015 nî 10 goe̍h 5 ji̍t[1][2][3] |
Signed | 2016 nî 2 goe̍h 4 ji̍t |
Location | Auckland, New Zealand |
Effective | Not in force |
Condition | Ratification by all original signatories, or (2 years after signature) ratification by at least 6 states corresponding to 85% of GDP of original signatories[4] |
Signatories | |
Ratifiers | |
Depositary | New Zealand |
Languages | English (prevailing in the case of conflict or divergence), Spanish, Vietnamese, Japanese, French |
Full text | |
Trans-Pacific Partnership at Wikisource |
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.