BusinessMirror

LIFT NON-TARIFF BARRIERS, PUT PROPER TARIFF—DTI

- @Tyronepiad BY TYRONE JASPER C. PIAD

THE Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) backed the lifting of non-tariff barriers and replacing them with an appropriat­e tariff instead, following the Economic Developmen­t Cluster’s (EDC) call to ease the country’s trade system.

Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez, in an interview with the BUSINESS MIRROR, said that imposing the proper tariff on imports while removing non-tariff barriers can support the local industry.

“It is always the best economic and trade policy principle to remove non-tariff barriers, that usually lead to bureaucrat­ic inefficien­cies and governance issues in issuing permits, higher costs and economic rent, and instead just replace it with the proper and needed tariff rate to develop and nurture the industry,” Lopez said.

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said, in a letter on April 20 to Senate President Vicente Sotto III, that during an EDC meeting last month, it was discussed that key commoditie­s that

propped up the inflation were due to the following factors: “government tariffs, low MAV [minimum access volume] quotas and non-tariff barriers to trade.”

e EDC then directed the DTI and Department of Agricultur­e (DA) to conduct a study should the MAV system be removed and replaced with an appropriat­e tariff rate. Lopez said the DTI is currently working on this with the DA, which is the lead agency given that the “MAV is for a few selected agri-commoditie­s.”

MAV refers to the certain volume of agricultur­al imports that are imposed lower tariffs. In the Philippine­s, it covers rice, corn, pork, poultry meat, coffee and sugar.

Sought for comment on the matter, Tariff Commission­er Ernesto L. Albano declined to give an opinion for the moment.

“It is premature for me to comment on this as it has not even filtered down for an interagenc­y level discussion,” he told the BM.

In the 2021 National Trade Estimate Report on Foreign Trade Barriers by the US Trade Representa­tive (USTR), among the non-tariff barriers cited were the quantitati­ve restrictio­ns. It was noted that the country does not allow the importatio­n of used motor vehicles in certain cases.

In addition, USTR said there have been reports of corruption and irregulari­ties in customs processes. ese include “costly delays, irregulari­ties in the valuation process, 100 percent inspection and testing of some products and inconsiste­nt assessment of fees.”

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