ADGSOM1 & ADGMIN1  
       
  LAUNCH OF THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION OF RUKUN NEGARA  
       
  KL SUMMIT 2019  
       
  HAWANA 2018  
       
  AES 2016  
       

 
 
 

November 24, 2024 -Sunday

 
  ASEAN ROUNDTABLE SERIES "FUTURE OF ASEAN TRADE: TACKLING NON-TARIFF-BARRIERS IN THE NEW WORLD TRADE ORDER"

Tuesday 02/04/2019


Tan Sri Dr Munir Majid, Chairman of CIMB ASEAN Research Institute (CARI) (third right) with (L-R) Juan Sebastian Cortes-Sanchez, Trade Policy Analyst of Asian Trade Centre; Dr. Kaewkamol Pitakdumrongkit, Deputy Head and Assistant Professor, Centre for Multilateralism Studies, S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies of Nanyang Technological University (RSIS); Chris Humphrey, Executive Director of EU-ASEAN Business Council; H.E. Ambassador Ong Keng Yong, Executive Deputy Chairman, RSIS Director, Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies of Nanyang Technological University; Tan Sri Datuk Rebecca Fatima Sta Maria, Executive Director of APEC Secretariat; and Alpana Roy, Director, ASEAN (Trade Division), Ministry of Trade and Industry Singapore at the ASEAN Roundtable Series co-hosted by RSIS, entitled "Future of ASEAN Trade: Tackling Non-Tariff Barriers in the New Trade Order" in Singapore today.



ASEAN lacks effective measures and decisive political determination to address Non-Tariff-Barriers (NTBs) thus hurting the growth of micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) 

 

SINGAPORE, April 2 (Bernama) -- Panellists speaking at the ASEAN Roundtable Series on the topic of “Future of ASEAN Trade: Tackling Non-Tariff-Barriers in the New World Trade Order” organised by CIMB ASEAN Research Institute (CARI) concurred that current measures to address NTBs in ASEAN were underdeveloped and stronger political will among ASEAN member states is critically needed to fully address the issue. 
  
Professor Kaewkamol Pitakdumrongkit, deputy head and assistant professor at the Centre for Multilateralism Studies, S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University pointed out that NTBs tend to hurt MSMEs more compared to large companies as big firms can better absorb costs incurred by Non-TariffMeasures (NTMs), and thus limiting MSMEs’ participation in transnational production networks. 
 
“On a technical front, capacity training should be provided to ASEAN public officials to equip them to better devise and simplify NTMs, whereas strong political will is required to tackle NTBs in ASEAN. It should be noted that the negative effects of trade on domestic constituencies should be addressed by trade adjustment assistance programmes, not regulations,” said Professor Kaewkamol. 
  
Tan Sri Dr Rebecca Fatima Sta Maria, Executive Director at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Secretariat said Non-Tariff-Measures should be a concern when they are trade distorting. “It is necessary to distinguish the difference between NTMs and NTBs and understand the impact of NTMs and this calls for us to determine the Advalorem equivalents (AVE) of the NTMs. Herein lies the challenge for policymakers. This also calls for collaboration between policymakers and researchers/economists for the work on AVE.”  
 
Asian Trade Center (ATC) Trade Policy Analyst, Juan Sebastian Cortes-Sanchez presented the findings of NTB-related research conducted by ATC the past year. According to their research, firms interviewed as part of ATC's continued research on NTBs in ASEAN note a wide and increasing array of challenges across multiple regional priority sectors such as automotive, healthcare and agri-food.  
 
This suggests that ASEAN’s past efforts to tackle NTMs and NTBs have not been successful. There are two broad reasons for this disconnect between repeated pledges and failure to deliver results on the ground: the commitments have not always addressed the right target; and timely and effective implementation have hamstrung efforts to tackle existing commitments. 
 
ATC research also found that ASEAN has focused much effort on addressing obstacles to trade related to standards.  While these clearly matter and should continue to stay in the mix of policies reviewed by ASEAN officials, firm-level interviews conducted by the ATC show that companies face challenges that go beyond just problems with inconsistent product standards. These may include high taxation, discriminatory policies favouring local manufacturers and an underdeveloped intellectual property regime. 
 
Expressing the concerns of EU business operating in ASEAN, Executive Director of the EU-ASEAN Business Council Chris Humphrey warns that ASEAN is at risk of failing to fulfil its potential, unless faster and more proactive action is taken on its own economic integration programme, including the removal of Non-Tariff Barriers.    
 
“Whilst great work has been done on tariff removal in the region, NTBs remain a major issue when coupled with other measures that hinder rather than facilitate trade. ASEAN is still a long way from being the single market and production base that the AEC envisaged.   Unfortunately, this means that intra-ASEAN trade remains low, and indeed lower now than it was a few years ago," said Chris Humphrey. 
 
H.E. Ambassador Ong Keng Yong, executive deputy chairman of the RSIS and director of Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies, Nanyang Technological University, in his opening remarks, offered a more cautious but positive outlook. 
 
“Recent ASEAN Business Outlook survey findings show that US companies remain optimistic about growth prospects and commercial opportunities in ASEAN.  Positive assessments like these augur well for ASEAN trade, whether intra- or inter-ASEAN.  However, obstacles such as the non-tariffs barriers would obviously put a dampener on growth,” he said. 
 
CARI Chairman Tan Sri Dr Munir Majid cautioned against relying too much on prospect. “ASEAN must understand future prospect is not a current reality. Projected numbers such as size of the combined economy, the young and huge market, and the boost in and through the use of new technologies, will start to run thin, if the ASEAN economy is not really one, if it continues to have cross-border impediments of all sorts, of which NTBs and NTMs are the most pervasive.”

The roundtable discussion was organised by CARI in partnership with the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University of Singapore.

About CARI

CIMB ASEAN Research Institute (CARI) was established in 2011 by CIMB Group. CARI is the first independent, transnational research institute dedicated solely to the advancement and acceleration of ASEAN integration. CARI is also the secretariat for the ASEAN Business Club.
  

SOURCE : CIMB Group 

FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
Name : Hong Jukhee
Director of Operations
Email : jukhee@cariasean.org 

--BERNAMA

 
 
 

Copyright © 2024 MREM . All rights reserved.