The Bruneian

ASEAN makes good progress in reducing trade costs, says UN survey

- THE BRUNEIAN

AUnited Nations survey shows Southeast Asian countries are making good progress in reducing trade costs through paperless trade and other measures. The average implementa­tion rate of ASEAN member states is 79%, higher than the Asia–Pacific regional average of 64.9%.

“Within the region, the implementa­tion level of ASEAN is next only to Australia and New Zealand and East and North-East Asia subregions,” says the Digital and Sustainabl­e Trade Facilitati­on in the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) 2021 report, which was jointly prepared by the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) and the ASEAN Secretaria­t.

Among ASEAN member states, Singapore achieved the highest implementa­tion rate at more than 90%, followed by the Philippine­s, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand, which achieved high implementa­tion rates of more than 80%.

The report is based on a global survey that reviewed the progress of trade facilitati­on reforms. It covers measures under the World Trade Organizati­on Trade

Facilitati­on Agreement (WTO TFA) as well as digital trade facilitati­on measures associated with the Framework Agreement on Facilitati­on of Cross-border Paperless Trade in Asia and the Pacific, a UN treaty that entered into force in February 2021.

Reforms continue despite COVID-19

Despite the severe impact of COVID-19 on internatio­nal trade, the global report says trade facilitati­on has made significan­t progress over the past 2 years. The overall implementa­tion rate of measures increased by more than five percentage points between 2019 and 2021. However, stronger efforts are needed to facilitate trade for small and medium-sized enterprise­s and other groups and sectors with special needs.

“Countries should continue and sustain efforts to strengthen cooperatio­n to adapt to the increasing­ly digital global economy while leaving no one behind,” said Armida Salsiah Alisjahban­a, United Nations Under-Secretary-General and Executive Secretary of ESCAP.

The report finds that digital trade facilitati­on measures serve as a great catalyst for trade cost reduction. Empirical evidence

shows that full digital trade facilitati­on implementa­tion beyond the WTO TFA commitment­s could cut the average trade cost by more than 13%, 6.7 percentage points more than that could be expected from meeting requiremen­ts of the WTO TFA.

In ASEAN, the survey results indicate that most trade cost reductions are associated with paperless trade measures rather than convention­al trade facilitati­on measures. Reforms classified under sustainabl­e trade facilitati­on are “least implemente­d, particular­ly those targeting women and SMEs.” Full implementa­tion of WTO FTA measures could bring down trade costs by 2.6%, while digital trade facilitati­on measures could reduce costs by more than 8%. Cross-border paperless trade Countries need to work together to develop and put into place the legal and technical protocols required for the seamless exchange of regulatory and commercial data and documentat­ion. The report notes that the implementa­tion of cross-border paperless trade is still low at 38%, with bilateral and subregiona­l paperless trade systems remaining mostly partial or used on a pilot basis.

The report suggests that regional and subregiona­l initiative­s—such as the Framework Agreement on Facilitati­on of Cross-border Paperless Trade in Asia and the Pacific and the expansion of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Single Window Agreement—could support countries in gradually moving to less paper and then to paperless and cross-border paperless trade by providing a dedicated, inclusive and capacity-building intergover­nmental platform.

The report cited that the framework agreement for Asia and the Pacific could help ASEAN to promote its initiative­s and solutions as well as support interopera­bility between the ASEAN Single Window and other paperless trade systems in other parts of the world.

 ?? ?? Singapore achieved the highest implementa­tion rate at more than 90%, followed by the Philippine­s, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand, which achieved high rates of more than 80%. Image: iStock/Delpixart
Singapore achieved the highest implementa­tion rate at more than 90%, followed by the Philippine­s, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand, which achieved high rates of more than 80%. Image: iStock/Delpixart
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