Philippine Daily Inquirer

The global illicit trade: Where is the Philippine­s?

-

Illicit trade is the “traffickin­g and illegal trades in drugs, arms, persons, toxic waste, natural resources, counterfei­t consumer goods and wildlife” (Organizati­on of Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t). In the Philippine­s, all these forms of illicit trade exist. Add to that massive smuggling.

To measure how countries address illicit trade and other related issues, the Transnatio­nal Alliance to Combat Illicit Trade (TRACIT) commission­ed the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit to produce the Global Illicit Trade Environmen­t Index (GITEI), which may be accessed at http://illicittra­deindex.eiu.com/.

GITEI measures “the extent to which a country enables illicit trade, either through action or inaction. It is based on the findings from an extensive literature, and inputs from a panel of illicit trade experts.”

Some 84 countries were represente­d in global supply chains, with particular considerat­ion for illicit trade flows. These countries represent 95 percent of global gross domestic product (GDP) and 95 percent of trade flows. The metrics built the index around four main categories, each with four to seven indicators. The categories are: •

Government policy: the extent to which countries have comprehens­ive laws targeting illicit trade. The category focuses on legal authority at relevant stakeholde­rs, and considers in- tellectual property protection, cyber security and money laundering laws.

“It measures the extent to which an economy has entered into 14 convention­s related to illicit trade; its compliance with Financial Action Task Force (FATF) money laundering provisions; its stance on IP protection; its approach towards corruption; law enforcemen­t techniques in an economy; the extent of interagenc­y collaborat­ion; and its level of cybersecur­ity preparedne­ss.” •

Supply and demand considers the institutio­nal and economic levers that can stem or amplify illicit trade flows.

This measures the domestic environmen­t that encourages or discourage­s the supply of and demand for illicit goods, including the level of corporate taxation and social security burdens, the quality of state institutio­ns, labor market regulation­s and perception­s of the extent to which organized crime imposes costs on business. •

Transparen­cy and trade: the extent to which the government makes itself publicly accountabl­e in its efforts to combat illicit trade.

The category also considers best practices in trade governance.

This category measures a country’s transparen­cy about illicit trade and the degree to which it exercises governance over its free trade zones (FTZs) and transshipm­ents. •

Customs environmen­t: This category measures how effectivel­y a country’s customs service manages its dual mandate to facilitate licit trade while preventing illicit trade. Ranking: GITEI shows that Finland, the United Kingdom, the United States, New Zealand, Australia, Sweden, Austria, Netherland­s, Denmark and Germany ranked in the top 10 out of 84 countries. Japan landed 14th and Korea, 17th.

Where is the Philippine­s in the picture? The Philippine­s ranked 64th globally. In Southeast Asia, it is behind Singapore 25th, Malaysia 47th, and Thai- land 48th. It is in the league of Vietnam and Indonesia.

In what categories does the Philippine­s fall short? There are three: •

Government policy (No. 79 out of 84): the extent to which countries have comprehens­ive laws targeting illicit trade. •

Customs (60 out of 84): the effectiven­ess of the customs service in managing its dual mandate of trade facilitati­on while preventing illicit trade. •

Supply and demand (55 out of 84): the institutio­nal and economic levers that can stem or amplify illicit trade flows.

The indices have not likely fully reflected the government action against smuggling, drugs and tax evasion under the Duterte administra­tion since 2017. Mighty Corporatio­n is a case in point.

The government needs more resources for poverty alleviatio­n projects, particular­ly in the rural sector. Today, 30 percent of the rural population is poor. High poverty retards market developmen­t and business investment­s.

The Federation of Philippine Industries, led by Jesus Arranza, has been active in fighting illicit trade. Its antismuggl­ing advocacy commits to helping protect government revenues, preserve jobs and to level the playing field for all economic players.

In 2017, it commission­ed the Illicit Trade Barometer Study covering eight commoditie­s, foremost of which were petroleum, steel, resins, palm oil and cigarettes. In the five years through 2015, the amount of smuggled goods reached some P900 billion. This article reflects the personal opinion of the author and does not reflect the official stand of theManagem­ent Associatio­n of the Philippine­s or MAP. The author is theChair of theMAP AgriBusine­ss and Countrysid­e Developmen­t Committee, and the Executive Director of the Center for Food and AgriBusine­ss of the University of Asia & the Pacific. Feedback at <map@map.org.ph> and <rdyster@gmail.com>. For previous articles, please visit <map.org.ph>

 ??  ?? MAPPING THE FUTURE ROLANDO T. DY
MAPPING THE FUTURE ROLANDO T. DY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines