Philippine Daily Inquirer

Economic integratio­n good for SE Asia, says Moody’s

- By Paolo G. Montecillo

ECONOMIC integratio­n will be good for Southeast Asian countries, but several issues still need to be addressed for the full impact to be felt across the region.

Moody’s Investor Service this week said the finalizati­on by members of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) of tariff liberaliza­tion by the end of 2015 was credit positive for the region and would boost intra-regional trade and economic growth.

“Greater intra-regional trade is credit positive for the region given that growth in other key export markets, such as China, is slowing,” Moody’s senior research analyst Rahul Ghosh said in a new report.

The Asean Economic Community (AEC) aims to accelerate integratio­n among the region’s 10 members through four distinct pillars: a single market and production base, a competitiv­e economic region, equitable economic developmen­t, and integratio­n with the global economy.

Intra-regional trade has reached record highs since the 2007 removal of tariffs for six Asean countries—Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippine­s, Singapore and Thailand. These have been operating tariff-free on 99 percent of products in the inclusion list.

The relative strength of intra-Asean trade, which accounts for 24.2 percent of the region’s total, will reduce the vulnerabil­ity of member states to external shocks, says Moody’s.

In addition, the rise in intra-regional foreign direct investment (FDI)—due to Asean’s successful implementa­tion of various free trade agreements and associated arrangemen­ts—to 17.4 percent of total flows in 2013, from 11.3 percent in 2007, is another “credit positive trend,” Moody’s said.

“Intra-Asean FDI is a more stable source of funding and insulates the regional economy from external headwinds,” it added.

However, other important aspects of the AEC, including the eliminatio­n of non-tariff barriers, enhanced regional labor mobility and financial integratio­n, will face delays due to intra-regional disparitie­s, a lack of institutio­nal capacity and a shift in focus toward domestic political issues.

Moody’s also expects that the implementa­tion of non-trade aspects of the AEC will face delays, suggesting that the wider positive implicatio­ns of economic integratio­n will take some time to manifest.

Key issues that hamper full implementa­tion include various disparitie­s among the region’s countries such as population size, per-capita income and ease of doing business, as well as structural difference­s in regulatory and tax regimes, and corporate governance standards, Moody’s said.

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