Summit Dialogue, Ep. 11: Yves Tiberghien on the Japanese G20 Summit in Osaka

Published: July 4, 2019, 5:44 p.m.

b'With this Ep 11 podcast we begin a series on the Japanese Osaka Summit. First up is Yves Tiberghien from the University of British Columbia. It is a great pleasure to welcome Yves back to the podcast studio. \\n\\nIf nothing else this G20 Summit was filled with pageantry \\u2013 principally Donald Trump\\u2019s. There is a series of Trump events \\u2013 meeting with China\\u2019s Xi Jinping over the US-China trade war, and, as it turns out, an agreement to provide a truce in the tariff increases by the United States while negotiations resume, his encounters with Vladimir Putin and the breakfast with the Saudi Crown Prince and of course the meeting with Kim Jong-un at the Korean DMZ just after the completion of the Summit. \\n\\nYves and discuss the implications of these Trump meetings, the progress on what Yves and I refer to as the top-tier issues of international trade and climate change action and then a number of mid-tier issues including: acting to limit marine plastics litter, illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing, digital \\u2018data free flows with trust\\u2019, quality infrastructure, IMF reforms with respect to concluding its quota review and governance reforms and possibly on digital taxation and base erosion and profit sharing (BEPS).\\u201d It was a busy Summit.\\n\\nYves is the Director Emeritus of the Institute of Asian Research at the University of British Columbia (UBC), Executive Director of the UBC China Council, and a full Professor of Political Science at the University of British Columbia. Importantly, Yves spent several years working in Japan and has focused a good deal of his research on globalization examining China in particular. He specializes in comparative political economy and international political economy with an empirical focus on China, Japan, and Korea\\n\\nLet\\u2019s join Yves in a first conversation on the Osaka G20 Summit.'