The Phnom Penh Post

Cambodia lags Asean peers in eliminatin­g tariffs

- Kali Kotoski

MORE than 96 percent of tariffs in Asean have been eliminated, but certain parts of the 10-nation economic bloc including Cambodia lag behind others in full implementa­tion of the Asean Trade in Goods Agreement (Atiga), the Ministry of Commerce said in a Facebook post yesterday.

It said 99.2 percent of tariffs in the “Asean 6” – comprising Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippine­s, Singapore and Thailand – have been eliminated. However, in the four countries that make up the CLMV region – Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam – tariff eliminatio­n sits at 90.9 percent, dragging down the bloc’s overall average.

The ministry’s posting comes as delegates of Asean member states attending the ninth meeting of the Asean Economic Ministers in Manila over the weekend agreed to adopt Atiga, the Asean Framework Agreement on Facilitati­on of Goods in Transit and the various sectoral work plans relevant to trade facilitati­on. The delegates also endorsed the Asean Harmonised Tariff Nomenclatu­re 2017 and its implementa­tion towards a simplified uniformed classifica­tion of goods.

Atiga, which came into force in early 2010, aims to establish an integrated market and production base with a free flow of goods by 2015 – the same year that the Asean Economic Community was officially formed.

Hiroshi Suzuki, chief economist of the Business Research Institute for Cambodia, explained that while the Kingdom has made positive strides in reducing tariffs, the Atiga framework gives special exemption for CLMV countries to be fully compliant.

“Atiga allows a transition period for CLMV countries,” he said. “For example, Asean 6 should have completed the reduction of customs tariff by 2015, while Cambodia is allowed [to complete] by 2018.”

Neverthele­ss, he added that Atiga was essential for many developing countries including Cambodia that are dependent on exports and have already proved valuable in shipping automobile parts to Thailand and Vietnam without tariffs.

“This helps Cambodia very much to be included in the internatio­nal supply chain among Asean countries and to diversify its export item and export destinatio­n away from only garment products to the EU and US,” he explained.

However, DavidVan, executive director of Deewee Management Consultant­s, said tariff eliminatio­n is not a clear-cut process that guarantees the free flow of goods as member states reserve the right to increase specific taxes that act as tariffs. He noted that Cambodia has already increased taxes on motor vehicles, tobacco and alcohol products that skew competitiv­e pricing on imports.

Van also noted that trade barriers for the export of agricultur­al products to the Kingdom’s immediate neighbours have been stalled by stringent sanitary and phytosanit­ary regulation­s despite Atiga aiming to reduce them.

“While other Asean products – especially from our immediate western and eastern neighbours – are flooding our market here, the other way round is that there is a serious deficit for Cambodia because it does not produce much,” he said. “Most commoditie­s are primarily exported raw for processing next door thus denying us of crucial value added if the products were processed in-country.”

 ?? SAHIBA CHAWDHARY ?? A cargo container is lifted for shipping earlier this year at the Sihanoukvi­lle Autonomous Port.
SAHIBA CHAWDHARY A cargo container is lifted for shipping earlier this year at the Sihanoukvi­lle Autonomous Port.

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