Philippine Daily Inquirer

Asean trade officials come together to enhance trade negotiatio­n skills

- By Ronnel W. Domingo

TRADE officials and business representa­tives from the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations including the Philippine­s have gathered in Cambodia to enhance skills in negotiatin­g free trade pacts amid continuing steps worldwide to ease the movement of goods.

Focusing onasean and Eutrade policies as well as new and emerging trade issues, the training is part of the European Union-funded, 2.5-million euro (about $3.2 million) Enhancing Asean FTA (free trade agreement) Negotiatin­g Capacity Program.

The program is designed to provide high-quality training, research and analysis, and bilateral FTA negotiatio­ns simulation­s.

The EU is the largest destinatio­n of exports from Asean, with shipments valued at more than $113.8 billion in 2011.

The two groupings started FTA negotiatio­ns in 2007, which were also designed to contribute to Asean’s process of regional integratio­n, but these have been suspended, leaving the EU in talks with individual Asean countries.

According to the Delegation of the EU to Asean, the EU “still believes that a region-to-region FTA makes political and economic sense in the long term and the strategic objective of concluding an agreement with the Asean as a region is retained.”

In a dinner meeting between EU officials in the Philippine­s and the INQUIRER business staff last week, it was pointed out that Philippine businesses and even the government are just starting to look at Europe as a trade bloc, rather than as a group of individual countries.

Data from the EU delegation show that “the EU has become the Philippine­s’ largest-single export market over the last five years.”

In 2010, Philippine exports to the EU expanded by at least 40 percent to $6.8 billion.

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