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CWEB.com – President Obama headed to Vietnam this week, the third U.S. president to do so in just over 20 years. In the many ways we’re engaging with the Vietnamese people, the President highlighted trade as one of the most important:
We’re pushing very hard for the Trans-Pacific Partnership – TPP. Because what that does is it reduces the barriers between countries for selling their goods and services. It gives opportunities not just to big companies but also to small companies to enter into the global supply chain.
It raises labor standards and environmental standards so that all countries are working on a level playing field. And if we can get that done – and the goal is, I think, to try to complete TPP before the end of this year – then that will open up a lot of opportunities, and create great confidence among investors here in Vietnam and U.S. companies who are interested in working with young people like you who may have a great idea.
In listening to his remarks, I couldn’t help think back to my first trip abroad with the President. As a video producer at the White House, it’s my job to document what President Obama does and whom he meets – and this time, I got to do it in Turkey, the Philippines, and Malaysia. It was a 10-day whirlwind.
Normally, our setting is the inside of a conference room or convention center for the myriad of bilateral meetings and summit working sessions the President participates in with other world leaders.
But when we made it to the third country of the 10-day trip, I had the rare opportunity to venture outside of the presidential “bubble” and into Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on the hunt for something we might recognize – products stamped with those three proud words: Made In America.
The President had just finished talking about the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a trade agreement with the U.S. and the Asia Pacific to export more of our goods abroad and support good-paying jobs at home. Put simply, more and more American entrepreneurs are looking to expand in the Asia Pacific, home to some of the fastest-growing markets in the world. And business leaders abroad are looking to import more American goods.
So why not head out and find the businesses he’s talking about? What kind of American exports make their way to KL? I wanted to see for myself, and hear what business owners abroad thought of the TPP and American-made goods.
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Video Credit
Finding Made in America in Malaysia
By Rachel Kopilow, White House Senior Video Producer
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