The United States has a trade problem; we buy more goods than we sell to foreign nations. President Trump Donald John TrumpSteele Dossier sub-source was subject of FBI counterintelligence probe Pelosi slams Trump executive order on pre-existing conditions: It 'isn't worth the paper it's signed on' Trump 'no longer angry' at Romney because of Supreme Court stance MORE contends that our trading partners treat us “unfairly.” This is a misperception of the problem. The issue is not that our trading partners treat the U.S. unfairly, they just treat other countries better.

They do so through a network of so-called free-trade agreements (FTAs). That term disguises the actual effect of the FTAs, which has little to do with free trade. They should be called “preferential-trade agreements.”

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Through these agreements, the parties offer each other tariff levels lower than those charged to parties outside of the agreement. Most of these agreements also deal with non-tariff barriers, establish mutual-recognition agreements for regulated products and establish procedures for conflict resolution.

The World Trade Organization (WTO), which sets the general trade rules, has tallied 447 bilateral and regional trade agreements. The United States is party to only 20 of these agreements. In other words, we do business in a world with an expansive preferential-trade network from which we are excluded.

As other countries enter into more of these agreements, we are more isolated. Unfortunately, President Trump’s new tariffs, combined with the threat of additional tariffs, have prompted a surge of new trade deals that exclude the United States. Since he took office, 17 new preferential-trade agreements have been registered with the WTO.

The newest preferential-trade agreement is between the EU and Japan. It creates a trade zone that, once it is ratified, will cover 30 percent of world trade by value. In truth, the deal has been in the works for years, but new U.S. protectionist trade policies prodded negotiators to move quickly.

The pact will provide some relief to Japan and the EU in the event the U.S. places tariffs on automobiles and other goods and services. It’s also another blow to U.S. farmers, who had hoped to increase exports to Japan and Europe to compensate for lost sales to China.

The largest new preferential agreement is the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPATTP), which links 11 countries representing 13.4 percent of the global gross domestic product ($13.5 trillion aggregate GDP) into a single network.

This has the potential to become the world’s largest trade agreement. Currently, it is second to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which may wither if the U.S., Mexico and Canada fail to modernize the pact.

CPATTP is often called TPP-11 because it replaces the 12-member Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) that would have included the United States had we not pulled out of it. Had the original version of TPP gone into force, it would have reduced tariffs paid by U.S. exporters on 16,000 manufactured products.

It would also have significantly lowered tariffs on U.S. agricultural exports and improved market access for thousands of U.S. products.

China seeks trade agreements with its neighbors, as well as with Australia, New Zealand, Africa, Latin America and Europe.

Several Latin American countries are looking for new agreements along the Pacific Rim, while Latin American countries on the Atlantic Coast are looking for agreements with the EU. In fact, most countries are working on new trade agreements.

It would be a mistake to conclude that other countries do not want trade agreements with the United States. They do, but we refuse to move forward primarily because our politicians can’t make the case for trade. Instead, our leaders look for a simplistic answer to this very complicated problem.

It is easy to say that a certain thing — such as a trade agreement — is the problem. It is more difficult to make the case that the absence of a thing is the problem.

I would love to hear our politicians say: “The problem is not the trade agreements that we do have; the problem is the agreements that we do not have.”

To alleviate our trade deficit, we must enter into new bilateral and regional trade agreements that will address the tariffs that our exporters face and improve our access to foreign markets. If we remain aloof from this preferential-trade network, we cannot solve our problems.

Richard Holwill is co-chair of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Trade Task Force. He served in several senior positions at the U.S. State Department and as ambassador to Ecuador. He is a member of the Council of American Ambassadors and is vice president of public policy at Alticor, the parent company of the Amway Corporation.