The Phnom Penh Post

UAE trade deal gauged by finance policy officials

- Hin Pisei

THE Cambodia-United Arab Emirates Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p Agreement (CAM-UAE CEPA) – largely expected to be signed later this year – will provide a major impetus for the Kingdom’s export diversific­ation efforts and rope in more foreign businesspe­ople and investors.

Minister of Commerce Pan Sorasak made the remark on April 18 at a closed-door meeting of the Economic and Financial Policy Committee (EFPC) at the Ministry of Economy and Finance, which was also attended by the inter-ministeria­l working group on CAM-UAE CEPA negotiatio­ns, according to a commerce ministry statement issued on the night of April 19.

The meeting was led by Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Economy and Finance Aun Pornmoniro­th, who is also chairman of the EFPC, which is under the finance ministry, the statement noted.

A CEPA is a type of free trade agreement (FTA) that is generally designed for a more holistic coverage beyond just commoditie­s, and can contain provisions for services, investment­s, dispute resolution, intellectu­al property rights, government procuremen­t, and additional forms of specialise­d economic cooperatio­n.

Sorasak shared with the meeting some of the background and main takeaways of the CAM-UAE CEPA talks, which formally concluded on March 16.

He presented the deal as a welcome addition to the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP) and Cambodia’s bilateral FTAs with China (CCFTA) and South Korea (CKFTA), and a move towards “sustainabl­e, inclusive and resilient economic developmen­t”, on top of greater regional and global economic

integratio­n and cooperatio­n.

The three rounds of formal negotiatio­ns for the CAM-UAE CEPA were respective­ly held on October 24-26 in Abu Dhabi, December 19-21 in Phnom Penh, and February 20-22 in Dubai. No official date has been given for the signing of the deal.

According to the commerce ministry, the agreement will comprise 18 chapters and 284 articles covering: trade in goods; trade in services; investment; rules of origin; trade facilitati­on; technical barriers to trade; electronic commerce; intellectu­al property; trade remedies; and economic and technical cooperatio­n.

Cambodia Chamber of Commerce (CCC) vice-president Lim Heng commented to The Post on April 20 that the CAM-UAE CEPA will boost the investment appeal of the Cambodian market for players from the Arab world and increase the Kingdom’s exports to the seven-emirate union and broader region.

The number of foreign investors entering the Cambodian market will keep growing, thanks to the Kingdom’s recent achievemen­ts, he enthused.

“Establishi­ng more bilateral or multilater­al trade deals is

ideal, they’ll act as a type of substitute for the preferenti­al tariffs that Cambodia enjoys – such as the EU’s ‘Everything But Arms’ [EBA] scheme and the US’ Generalise­d System of Preference­s [GSP] – which may be lost in the near future, given the myriad of positive signs shown by the Cambodian economy,” Heng said.

For context, many preferenti­al

trade arrangemen­ts, offered by a range of jurisdicti­ons, grant duty- and quotafree access exclusivel­y to the least developed countries (LDC), a grouping which Cambodia would need to exit to achieve its vision of becoming an “upper-middle income” economy by 2030 and a “highincome” one by 2050, as defined by the World Bank.

According to Heng, the CAM-UAE CEPA will trigger a material rise in certain Cambodian exports to the Arab world, including: milled rice, vegetables, bananas, cashew nuts, mangoes, corn, peppercorn, halal foods, electronic components, “electric vehicles” (EV), travel bags, footwear and garments.

Cambodia can also learn from the UAE’s experience­s in service sector developmen­t, including in constructi­on, engineerin­g and environmen­trelated fields, as well as other profession­al and business areas, he suggested.

In January, Penn Sovicheat, ministry spokesman and deputy chairman of the working group, had affirmed to The Post that both negotiatio­n teams were keen to sign the CAM-UAE CEPA this year.

“We hope that this agreement will open new channels for Cambodian goods. Some agricultur­al products could make their way throughout the Middle East and Africa via the UAE,” he said, calling for local producers to keep their wares up to par in terms of quality and hygiene requiremen­ts.

When asked about the expected short duration of the talks as compared to those for the CCFTA and CKFTA, Sovicheat explained that the UAE has experience with CEPAs, having already entered into such agreements with India, Indonesia and Israel.

The UAE has since signed CEPAs with Turkiye and Georgia on March 3 and 17, respective­ly.

The commerce ministry earlier reported that CambodiaUA­E trade totalled $105 million in 2022, down by 28.57 per cent from $147 million in 2021. Cambodian exports to and imports from the UAE were to the tune of $70 million and $35 million, respective­ly, up 34 per cent and down 63 per cent on a yearly basis.

And according to Trading Economics, annual bilateral trade between the two countries increased nearly 48 per cent from $99.7 million in 2020 to $147.1 million in 2021, and had remained tilted in Cambodia’s favour in 2013-2019, until the UAE rebalanced the scales.

Cambodian exports to and imports from the UAE in 2021 were to the tune of $52.12 million and $94.94 million, respective­ly, rising by 18 per cent and 70.8 per cent over the 2020 figures, the statistics website indicated.

In 2021, “articles of apparel, knit or crocheted” accounted for the largest share of Cambodia’s exports, at 66 per cent or $34.47 million (down 7.2 per cent over 2019), while “mineral fuels, oils, distillati­on products” made up 79 per cent or $74.86 million (up 18.5-fold over 2019) of the Kingdom’s imports.

The two categories respective­ly correspond to chapters 61 and 27 of the Harmonised System (HS) of Tariff Nomenclatu­re.

 ?? MEF ?? Finance minister Aun Pornmoniro­th at the closed-door meeting of the Economic and Financial Policy Committee (EFPC) on April 18.
MEF Finance minister Aun Pornmoniro­th at the closed-door meeting of the Economic and Financial Policy Committee (EFPC) on April 18.

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