Arab Times

Singapore scores ‘poorly’ in ability to prevent illicit trade

Australia, NZ among top performers

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SINGAPORE, Oct 12, (AP): The wealthy city-state of Singapore — with its flourishin­g trade, orderly life and almost non-existent crime — is hardly a place one would associate with illegal trade. But a new report by a reputed organizati­on reveals that in fact the country has a poor record of preventing just that.

The Economist Intelligen­ce Unit released a 100-point index Wednesday that placed Singapore at seven out of 17 Asian countries for its ability to prevent illicit trade that includes counterfei­t goods, arms and endangered wildlife. Singapore’s low ranking was largely the result of its lacunae in its free trade zones.

Commission­ed by the European Chamber of Commerce, the index evaluated countries against 14 indicators including transparen­cy, intellectu­al property and customs.

Singapore scored 69.8 points to tie with Taiwan. Still, it is behind neighbor Malaysia (71.8), often seen as a nation with a far less efficient government. The top performers were Australia (85.2), New Zealand (81.8) and Hong Kong (81.4).

Singapore’s government did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment by The Associated Press.

“While it has the strongest customs environmen­t, a failure to monitor its busy free trade zones dragged Singapore’s score down,” the EIU said in a press release.

One of the index’s indicators rated countries between zero to four for free trade zone governance, including checks on warehouses for smuggled goods. Singapore was handed a score of one, meaning that there was little to no monitoring. It also received a poor rating for government cooperatio­n with stakeholde­rs.

“Given the constant evolving nature of illicit trade, authoritie­s need to constantly enhance their regulatory controls and enforcemen­t effort — especially in free trade zones,” Simon Jim, the chairman of the European Chamber of Commerce’s Committee on Intellectu­al Property Rights, told reporters at a news conference where the report was released.

“Fake goods don’t just take revenue away from companies or government­s. They threaten the security of nations by supporting transnatio­nal crime syndicates and terrorist groups,” he added.

Southeast Asian counterpar­ts, except Brunei that did not feature in the index, ranked low on the table. The bottom three were Cambodia (23.9), Laos (12.9) and Myanmar (10.8). China, which carries a reputation of being a hub for counterfei­t goods, had a score of 61.6.

“Illicit trade is more than just counterfei­t goods. Illicit trade includes guns, it includes endangered species and endangered wildlife. It includes human traffickin­g,” said author Chris Clague from the EIU.

“A lot of these other forms of illicit trade... follow the same channels that counterfei­t goods do,” he said.

EIU said that rising labor costs in China could encourage manufactur­ers to look for cheaper sites, causing illicit trade to flow to developing Southeast Asian countries.

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