Proliferation of FTAs in East Asia

Similar documents
Japan s Policy to Strengthen Economic Partnership. November 2003

International Business Global Edition

Japan s s Strategy for Regional Trade Agreements

IIPS International Conference

Growth, Investment and Trade Challenges: India and Japan

Lecture 4 Multilateralism and Regionalism. Hyun-Hoon Lee Professor Kangwon National University

East Asia and Latin America- Discovery of business opportunities

E-Commerce Development in Asia and the Pacific

Dr. Biswajit Dhar Professor Centre for Economic Studies and Planning Jawaharlal Nehru University New Delhi

International Business

MEGA-REGIONAL FTAS AND CHINA

Unmasking the Regional Trade Agreements in Asia and the Pacific

ASEAN 2015: OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES

Free Trade Vision for East Asia

RTAs/FTAs in the Global Economy and the Asia- Pacific Region

Economic integration: an agreement between

Regionalism in East Asia and the Asia-Pacific. Robert Scollay PECC Trade Forum and University of Auckland

The Nexus between Trade and Cooperation

Future Exchange Rate Arrangement in East Asia. Part III

Trans-Pacific Trade and Investment Relations Region Is Key Driver of Global Economic Growth

Trade Integration in ASEAN:

Presentation on TPP & TTIP Background and Implications. by Dr V.S. SESHADRI at Centre for WTO Studies New Delhi 3 March 2014

Regional Cooperation and Integration

Chapter 9. Regional Economic Integration

Chapter 5: Internationalization & Industrialization

APEC s Bogor Goals Mid-Term Stock Taking and Tariff Reduction

Economic Development: Miracle, Crisis and Regionalism

Charting South Korea s Economy, 1H 2017

Charting Singapore s Economy, 1H 2017

THE AEC PROGRESS, CHALLENGES AND PROSPECTS

Regionalism and multilateralism clash Asian style

The Asian financial crisis that broke out in

The IISD Global Subsidies Initiative Barriers to Reforming Fossil Fuel Subsidies: Lessons Learned from Asia

Charting Indonesia s Economy, 1H 2017

Understanding the Emerging Pattern of Regional Trade and Economic Cooperation in Asia

Trade in Services Division World Trade Organization

What Do Bar Associations Need to Know About the GATS and Other Trade Agreements

Youen Kim Professor Graduate School of International Studies Hanyang University

Contemporary theory, practice and cases By Ilan Alon, Eugene Jaffe, Christiane Prange & Donata Vianelli

The RCEP: Integrating India into the Asian Economy

INTRODUCTION The ASEAN Economic Community and Beyond

Mizuho Economic Outlook & Analysis

"Prospects for East Asian Economic Integration: A Plausibility Study"

FY2014 Survey on the International Operations of Japanese Firms JETRO Overseas Business Survey

OSHIKAWA Maika Head, Asia and Pacific Desk, Institute for Training and Technical Co-operation, World Trade Organization (WTO)

Hinrich Foundation Sustainable Trade Index Country overview: Malaysia

Understanding AEC : Implication for Thai Business MRS. SRIRAT RASTAPANA

172 Index. CACM. See Central American

3) The European Union is an example of integration. A) regional B) relative C) global D) bilateral

Lula and Lagos Countries with links under APEC and MERCOSUR

Chapter Nine. Regional Economic Integration

Economics of the Trans- Pacific Partnership (TPP)

Principal Trade Negotiator Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry Senior Fellow Research Institute of Economy, Trade and Industry October 19, 2011

Mega-regionalism and Developing Countries

Charting Philippines Economy, 1H 2017

Charting Cambodia s Economy

Thailand Regional Free Trade Agreements (FTA) and the Effect on Industrial Clustering

Woonho Lee Standing Commissioner Korea Trade Commission

Regional Integration. Ajitava Raychaudhuri Department of Economics Jadavpur University Kolkata. 9 May, 2016 Yangon

China ASEAN Relations: Opportunities and Challenges for Development

ASEAN-INDIA STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP AND DESIGN OF FUTURE REGIONAL TRADING ARCHITECTURE

VIETNAM'S FTA AND IMPLICATION OF PARTICIPATING IN THE TPP

Cambridge Model United Nations 2018 WTO: The Question of Free Trade Agreements in a Changing World

Charting Australia s Economy

How can Japan and the EU work together in the era of Mega FTAs? Toward establishing Global Value Chain Governance. Michitaka Nakatomi

Hinrich Foundation Sustainable Trade Index Country overview: Vietnam

Push and Pull Factors for Japanese Manufacturing Companies Moving Production Overseas

Agenda 2) MULTIPRODUCT MULTILATERALISM: EARLY POST WORLD WAR II TRADE POLICY

pacific alliance the why it s (still) important for western canada canada west foundation november 2017 naomi christensen & carlo dade

Japan s s foreign policy. Lecturer: Dr. Masayo Goto

Trade Facilitation and Better Connectivity for an Inclusive Asia and Pacific

The Asia-Pacific as a Strategic Region for the European Union Tallinn University of Technology 15 Sep 2016

Environmental Justice: ADB and Asian Judges for Sustainable Development. OGC Law and Policy Reform Program

THE CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES OF ASIA-PACIFIC TRADE

U.S. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

Mega-Regionalism in Asia: 5 Economic Implications

Drivers of Regional Integration in ASEAN

The Missing Link: Multilateral Institutions in Asia and Regional Security

Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperation and the Free Trade Area of the Americas, Possibilities of Cross- Pacific Cooperation

State and Prospects of the FTAs of Japan and the Asia-Pacific Region. February 2013 Kazumasa KUSAKA

ADVANCED REGIONAL GOVERNMENT PROCUREMENT WORKSHOP FOR ASIAN ECONOMIES. Bangkok, Thailand January 2015 PROGRAMME

KINGDOM OF CAMBODIA NATION RELIGION KING 3 TOURISM STATISTICS REPORT. September 2010

Globalization GLOBALIZATION REGIONAL TABLES. Introduction. Key Trends. Key Indicators for Asia and the Pacific 2009

Hinrich Foundation Sustainable Trade Index Country overview: Thailand

United States Regional and Bilateral Trade Agreements

CHILE NORTH AMERICA. Egypt, Israel, Oman, Saudi Arabia and UAE. Barge service: Russia Federation, South Korea and Taiwan. USA East Coast and Panama

Enterprise for ASEAN Initiative: Implications for ASEAN and Its Members

Japan-ASEAN Relations --- Post February, 2016 Yukiko Okano Chargé d affaires, Minister-Counsellor Mission of Japan to ASEAN

Outline of the Patent Examination

Explaining Asian Outward FDI

Dr. Biswajit Dhar Professor Jawaharlal Nehru University New Delhi

Building an ASEAN Economic Community in the heart of East Asia By Dr Surin Pitsuwan, Secretary-General of ASEAN,

The Role of EU Trade Policy in Enhancing the Competitiveness of European Industry

Global Trends in Location Selection Final results for 2005

Towards South Asian Economic Union- Trade Facilitation including Customs Cooperation

Trade led Growth in Times of Crisis Asia Pacific Trade Economists Conference 2 3 November 2009, Bangkok

Assessing Barriers to Trade in Education Services in Developing ESCAP Countries: An Empirical Exercise WTO/ARTNeT Short-term Research Project

China and India:Convergence and Divergence

East Asian Regionalism and the Multilateral Trading System ERIA

ASEAN Community: ASEAN Political Security Community Public Seminar ASEAN: My Choice, My Future

Transcription:

Proliferation of FTAs in East Asia Shujiro URATA Waseda University and RIETI April 8, 2005

Contents I. Introduction II. Regionalization in East Asia III. Recent Surge of FTAs in East Asia IV. The Factors Behind the Proliferation of FTAs in East Asia V. Expected Benefits of FTAs in East Asia VI. Obstacles to FTAs in East Asia VII. Ways to Overcome Obstacles toward the Establishment of FTAs VIII. East Asian FTA and East Asian Community? IX. Conclusions

I. Introduction Economic Situation in East Asia Rapid economic growth before the financial crisis based on trade and FDI expansion with economic fundamentals Serious damage from the financial crisis (except China) Not fully recovered from the crisis (except China) Potential for rapid economic growth Objective of Presentation: Discuss Issues related to FTAs, which would promote economic growth in East Asia

II. Regionalization in East Asia Regionalization Concentration of economic activities in a particular region (trade in goods and services, capital, people, etc) Benefits of agglomeration > costs of agglomeration Measurement of regionalization in terms of trade: Increasing intra-regional trade in world trade Increasing intra-regional trade in region s overall trade

Two Types of Regionalization Market-driven regionalization Institution-driven regionalization

Factors behind Market-driven Regionalization Rapid economic growth Trade and FDI liberalization: multilateral and unilateral liberalization

Institution-driven Regionalization in East Asia (1) Regional cooperation APEC : Trade and FDI liberalization, Facilitation, Economic and Technical cooperation Bilateral and plurilateral cooperation Free trade agreements (Economic Partnership Agreements, comprehensive contents) Chiang-mai Initiative (Currency swap), etc

Institution-driven Regionalization in East Asia (2) ASEAN AFTA, AIA (ASEAN Investment Area), AICO, etc. ASEAN+3 (China, Japan, Korea) Annual Leaders` Meeting, Meetings of Finance, Foreign Ministers China, Japan, Korea Annual Leaders` Meeting

III. Recent Surge of FTAs in East Asia Trends East Asian economies started showing strong interest in FTAs toward the end of 1990s Special characteristics Comprehensive FTA (EPA) covering trade and FDI liberalization, facilitation, economic cooperation: APEC s three pillars

FTAs in East Asia In Action Bangkok Treaty (1976) AFTA(1992) Singapore-New Zealand (2001) Japan-Singapore (2002) Singapore-Australia (2003) Singapore-EFTA (2003) Singapore-US (2004) Korea-Chile (2004) China-Hong Kong (2004) Taiwan-Panama(2004) China-ASEAN (2004) Japan-Mexico (2005) In Negotiation Japan-Korea Japan-Malaysia Japan-Thailand Japan-Philippines Korea-Singapore Korea-ASEAN Singapore-Canada Singapore-Mexico Singapore-India Thailand-India* Thailand-US Thailand-Australia Hong Kong-New Zealand Under Study Japan-ASEAN Japan-Indonesia Korea-Australia Korea-New Zealand Singapore-Chile Singapore-Taiwan ASEAN-India ASEAN-US ASEAN-EU ASEAN-CER

Japan-Singapore EPA Liberalization: goods trade, service trade, FDI, government procurement, etc. Facilitation: trade, FDI, mobility of natural persons, etc. Cooperation: science and technology, information technology, human resource development, tourism, etc.

IV. The Factors behind the Proliferation of FTAs in East Asia Increase market access Sharp increase in FTAs in the world Slow progress in trade liberalization under the WTO Promote liberalization and policy reforms Financial crisis in 1997-98 Rivalry among East Asian countries (competitive FTAs, China-Japan, among ASEAN members

The Number of FTAs in the World (cumulative)

Main Regional FTAs/EPAs NAFTA EU CHINA JAPAN Population: 411 million Population: 453 million Population: 1.266 billion Population: 126 million GDP: US$11.100 trillion GDP: US$9.600 trillion GDP: US$1.080 trillion GDP: US$4.760 trillion EU 25 countries Japan-Korea FTA (under negotiation) Japan-Mexico EPA (signed agreement) NAFTA U.S.A., Canada, Mexico FTAA (by 2005) EU-MEXICO FTA expanding to Latin America under negotiation MERCOSUR 4 countries Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay ACP-EU Countries in Africa and the Caribbean (approx. 70 countries) expanding to Eastern Europe (within 10 years) SAPTA Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka India - ASEAN FTA AFTA ASEAN-10 Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Brunei, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, Cambodia China - ASEAN FTA Japan-Mexico EPA (signed agreement) Japan-ASEAN EPA (regional) Japan-ASEAN Comprehensive Economic Partnership (negotiation will start in April 2005) (bilateral) Japan-Singapore EPA (Nov.30, 2002 entry into force) Japan-The Philippines EPA (Nov. 29, 2004 agreed in principle) Japan-Thailand EPA ( under negotiation) Japan-Malaysia EPA (under negotiation) ASEAN Population: 548 million GDP: US$646 billion

Motives behind FTA for Selected East Asian Countries (1) Japan Promote economic growth in East Asia: Increasing dependence on East Asia Improve business environment for Japanese firms China Promote economic relations with East Asia

Motives behind FTA for Selected East Asian Countries (2) Korea Play a role of facilitator for institutional regionalization in East Asia Reunification of Korean Peninsula ASEAN Maintain bargaining power in East Asia Receive economic assistance

Japan s FTA Strategy Focus on East Asia Comprehensive framework: WTO-plus Economic Partnership Agreement (FTA, Economic Cooperation: Policy coherence) System harmonization (technical standard, etc)

V. Expected Benefits of FTA in East Asia for East Asia Economic benefits Economic growth Non-economic benefits Deeper mutual understanding Closer social ties Political and social stability

Australia/New Zealand China Hong Kong Japan Korea Taiwan Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Singapore Thailand Vietnam Other Asia United States EU GDP (Changes from basedata, %) -0.23 1.27 1.41 0.05 1.71 1.51 5.61 2.83 2.02 2.26 15.90 8.42-0.31-0.06-0.01 Equivalent Variation (Changes from basedata, US$ million) -1,342 5,485 3,389 8,199 7,805 5,597 10,209 2,279 602 2,944 19,790 1,446-1,803-7,059-1,807 (Changes divided by GDP in 1997, %) -0.29 0.64 2.42 0.19 1.75 1.87 4.89 2.15 0.77 3.69 12.54 6.61-0.34-0.09-0.02

VI. Obstacles to FTAs in East Asia Economic obstacles Opposition to trade liberalization Political and security obstacles Lack of political leadership Different political systems Different views on regional security Historic and other obstacles Lack of mutual understanding

Obstacles to FTAs for Japan Liberalization in agricultural imports Labor mobility

Table 3 Effects of East Asia FTA on Production by Sectors (% change) China Japan Korea Hong Singapore Taiwan Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand Vietnam Sector Kong Agriculture 4.5-3.9-11.9 0.3 4.7 1.6 1.3 0.4 2.0 5.2 0.4 Forestry -0.2-1.8-3.6 1.7-7.4 3.2 8.6 2.1 2.1 16.3 11.4 Fishing 0.9-2.8 7.6-2.6 7.8-1.0 3.9 2.5 1.3 12.6 6.1 Mining -0.2-0.7-2.1 3.8 4.1-0.9 1.4 1.7 4.1 19.2-8.3 Food products and beverages 1.6-3.4 30.1 19.3 36.7 6.9 5.3 15.3-1.3 23.5 8.9 Textiles -0.2-2.3 17.4 3.2 1.9 17.1 3.7 7.7 13.9 8.4 174.8 Pulp, paper and paper products -1.1-0.4 1.9 3.3 3.7 1.6 8.9 4.3 0.8 16.1 16.9 Chemicals -1.6 1.1 3.4 5.5 11.1 7.1 1.4 4.4 2.0 10.6-2.0 Iron, steel and metal products -1.5 2.2-1.4 4.7 7.7 0.0 2.9 1.4 6.7 20.1-18.3 Transportation machinery -16.2 5.2 1.0-7.9-14.3-6.9-47.8-24.0 29.3-11.0-55.1 Electronic equipment 6.9-0.7-1.9 0.9 1.9-2.5 17.4 5.7 8.9 29.2-0.9 General machinery -1.6 2.2-4.8 7.4 5.5 1.7 22.8 7.4 12.7 26.8-3.7 Other manufacturing 1.6-0.5 0.9 8.1 5.0 2.5 7.3 1.2 5.8 18.1 12.9

VII. Ways to Overcome the Obstacles (1) Implement programs to deal effectively with structural adjustment necessitated by trade and FDI liberalization Specifically *Scheduled trade liberalization (10 years) *Economic assistance to impacted workers (income compensation, technical assistance to improve quality of labor) *Need for comprehensive FTA (Economic Partnership Agreement, EPA) to include economic and technical assistance

Ways to Overcome the Obstacles (2) Pursue economic cooperation programs covering broad range of issues with common interests: energy, food, environment, etc Deepen mutual understanding through closer communications and active exchange of people of all levels Strong political leadership Strong support from the general public (education and advocacy, role of mass media)

Japan s Role Play active role in promoting FTAs by liberalizing agricultural and labor markets. Actively engage in comprehensive and effective economic cooperation in human resource development, energy use, environmental problems, food security, infrastructure development, etc. Overcome historic problems with China and Korea Formulate a roadmap toward EAFTA with cooperation with other East Asian countries.

VIII. East Asia FTA and Beyond? Challenges Setting the Common Goals (EAFTA [medium term goal?], East Asian Community [long term goal?] Drawing a Roadmap (3x(ASEAN+1), ASEAN+3, ASEAN+3+3,.) WTO Consistency: Comprehensive liberalization (liberalization in substantially all the trade) and other conditions (GATT XXIV, Enabling Clause) Establishing consistent rules of origin Japan s Role Lead discussion to formulate a roadmap toward EAFTA with cooperation with other East Asian countries.

IX. Conclusions Promote FTAs, East Asia FTA, East Asian Community to achieve economic prosperity, social and political stability Promote trade liberalization at global (WTO) and regional levels (APEC) Improve WTO Rules on FTA (RTA): Phase out FTAs under Enabling Clause (high-level, transparency)