The Phnom Penh Post

UK travel goods exports set for boost

- Hom Phanet

THE UK government has released a few more details on the proposed revamp of its Generalise­d Scheme of Preference­s (GSP), due to be rolled out in early 2023, which observers say suggest that the new regime could be more favourable for Cambodian garment and textile-related commoditie­s, especially travel goods.

However, the Garment Manufactur­ers Associatio­n in Cambodia (GMAC), the apex garment makers’ body, highlighte­d in a letter at the weekend that the Developing Countries Trading Scheme (DCTS) would offer no significan­t changes in preference­s for Cambodia, although acknowledg­ing that the scheme would be “a bit more liberal for travel goods”.

“Travel goods” is a designatio­n that includes suitcases, backpacks, handbags, wallets and similar items.

The letter pointed out that London would retain the same three-tiered system as the previous scheme – General Framework, Enhanced Framework, and LDC (least developed country) Framework – which it noted is based on the EU’s General, GSP+, and EBA (Everything But Arms) tiers.

The tiers of preference­s within the DCTS will be renamed to Standard Preference­s, Enhanced Preference­s, and Comprehens­ive Preference­s, the last of which is specifical­ly designed for LDCs, it added.

“There will still be duty-free, quotafree access for everything but arms for Cambodia, and all LDCs, under the Comprehens­ive tier,” GMAC said.

“However, a few more products have been made duty-free under the Enhanced tier. That means that around 85 per cent of UK tariff lines are now duty-free under the Enhanced tier while around 80 per cent have reduced duties under the Standard tier. Travel goods are duty-free under all tiers, but apparel is duty-free only under the Enhanced and Comprehens­ive tiers,” it added.

Speaking to The Post, Cambodia Travel Goods and Leather Associatio­n (CTLA) chairman Lim Tong hailed the latest details of the UK’s DCTS as “good news for the travel goods sector in Cambodia that comes as orders start to fall significan­tly amid a slowdown in the global economy”.

Nonetheles­s, he voiced concern that the dry-up in orders coupled with global instabilit­y and economic downturn are hurting key exports of Cambodian garment items.

Cambodia Chamber of Commerce vice-president Lim Heng said that the new trading scheme would not only be able to offset some of the losses from the EU’s partial withdrawal

of its EBA scheme, which affects 20 per cent of Cambodia’s exports to the bloc, but also help boost the volume of Cambodian goods available across EU nations.

“The preferenti­al system will encourage more products to be exported to the UK or to the EU via the UK, which is a sublime opportunit­y for investors in garments, textiles, bags, bicycles, electrical equipment and solar products,” he said.

However, Ky Sereyvath, economics researcher at the Royal Academy of Cambodia (RAC), claimed that the UK’s more liberal DCTS means that Cambodia would be able to buy raw materials from countries with perceived shortcomin­gs in upholding human rights.

Under the earlier GSP, turning out semi-finished and finished goods from raw materials purchased from such nations “may be a problem with the British refusing to buy the products”, he said.

“But this preferenti­al system does not have the same human rights conditions as before.”

According to the GMAC letter: “The criteria for [the Enhanced tier] is now a simple economic vulnerabil­ity criterion as opposed to the human rights criteria in the EU GSP+ scheme. That means almost all non-LDCs are now part of the Enhanced tier – and thus have duty-free access for all apparel and travel goods.”

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? Garment workers toil away at the then-named Phnom Penh Special Economic Zone.
HONG MENEA Garment workers toil away at the then-named Phnom Penh Special Economic Zone.

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