Statement on Administrative Barriers
A SURVEY OF ADMINISTRATIVE BARRIERS TO TRADE | POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS |
BACKGROUND
Pacific Basin economies have enjoyed some of the highest growth rates in the world in the recent past. This success is closely related to the dramatic, and continuing, expansion of international trade and investment in the region. The Asia Pacific Economic Co-operation forum (APEC) has decreed that there will be free trade in the region by 2010 for developed economies and no later than 2020 for all economies. Now, however, business people are encountering a number of serious obstacles that hinder open trade and investment and that make it difficult for regional companies to boost their competitiveness by capitalising on local efficiencies.
The Pacific Basin Economic Council (PBEC) is an association of business leaders from 20 economies throughout the Pacific. For the last 30 years, PBEC has encouraged open trade and investment in the Asia Pacific region and believes that both PBEC and APEC share a similar vision for continued development into a free trade area in the 21st century. At its Steering Committee Meeting in Osaka in November 1995, PBEC identified the reduction of administrative barriers to trade in the region as one of the key business issues to be put forward to APEC leaders. With the successful reduction of typical trade barriers such as tariffs and quotas, countries are now in a position to turn to administrative barriers. The problem seems particularly prominent for the Pacific region, given the diverse character of APEC and the different levels of development in legal, regulative and administrative systems in APEC member economies. In order for business to effectively expand trade in the region, APEC economies must make all related regulations and guidelines uniformly clear and accessible to business.
A Working Committee on Administrative Barriers to Trade has been established by PBEC to identify and propose solutions to reduce administrative barriers to trade. This report was prepared to help the Working Committee in its study of major administrative trade barriers in the Asia-Pacific region. The purpose of the report is to:
assess the business impacts of these barriers on international trade in the region;
identify the administrative barriers to trade in goods and services in the region; and
review the current initiatives, particularly in the context of a view toward proposing further policy measures to address and reduce major outstanding administrative barriers.
Administrative barriers to trade (ABT) are a form of non-tariff barrier. Our definition of ABT is as follows: ABT are the direct restrictions on or problems arising from interpreting or applying trade regulations. ABT can be categorized into restrictions on market access, restrictions on personnel, and transparency of regulatory information which all indirectly prohibit or restrict trade and foreign investment.
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A SURVEY OF ADMINISTRATIVE BARRIERS TO TRADE
Besides studying trade regulations and other published information on administrative barriers to trade, we sent questionnaires to individual PBEC member companies to obtain first hand information about the ABT faced by the business community in the PBEC economies. The results of this survey form a major component of the report.
Business Impact
Our survey study shows that administrative barriers to trade have a significant impact on companies doing business in the Pacific-Basin region. About one-quarter of the respondents indicated that they spent more than 5% of their operating cost in dealing with ABT in 1996. Around one-half of the respondents estimated that their profit would be increased by more than 5%. These cost and profit figures may be downward biased, however, because firms tend to choose to operate in markets with less ABT.
In the survey, firms were further asked whether they have ever deferred or abandoned plans for expansion because of the awareness of ABT in some PBEC economies. More than a quarter of the firms indicated that they had made such a decision. Moreover, 11.4% reported that they had withdrawn from a particular market because they found that ABT in this PBEC economy were too excessive. Thus, these results provide clear evidence that the presence of ABT has made a significant number of firms in the Pacific-Basin region defer/abandon their expansion plan and even withdraw totally from a market. The negative impact of ABT makes the need to remove excessive ABT an urgent one if PBEC economies are to continue to enjoy high growth rates.
Top-Ten Barriers
The ten most often reported ABT are (in descending order):
restrictions on foreign ownership;
inconsistency/confusion in regulations;
difficulties in obtaining visas;
inconsistency/confusion in implementation of regulations;
officially sanctioned monopolies/cartels;
excessive documentation requirements;
lack of publicity of regulations;
restrictive property rights and commercial presence;
unfair tax treatment; and
quota on number of foreign/local workers.
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Based on the survey results and our research on various policy initiatives at APEC and WTO, we recommend that the governments of the PBEC economies adopt the following initiatives to reduce administrative barriers to trade.
If recommended implementation time limits exceed WTO time limits, WTO standards govern.
Policy Recommendations for Enhancing Market AccessMeasures to Enhance Market Access | Short
Term Plan (implement within 5 years) |
Medium
Term Plan (implement within 10 years) |
Increase foreign firms participation in the following sectors: telecommunications, insurance, tourism, retail trade, business/professional services, freight and passenger transport |
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Improve the competitive
environment in the APEC region (Officially sanctioned monopoly/cartel) |
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Provide an open investment regime (Restrictions on foreign ownership) | identify priority sectors for
each economy and open all other sectors to foreign investments with specified timetables treat international investors impartially, in accordance with national and international law (national treatment) ensure the transparency and accessibility of investment policies by publicising the Guide to APEC Investment Regimes through the Internet |
maintain opened sectors as they
are substantially ease restrictions on foreign investments in priority sectors adopt policies which permit international investors to own and manage their enterprises to the extent necessary to maximize their ability to obtain an adequate return |
Reduce documentation requirement (Excessive documentation requirement) |
computerise customs procedures
according to the WTO Agreement on Customs Valuation Principles mutually recognise international standards on electrical and electronic appliances, food labelling and machinery accelerate the work on Mutual Recognition Arrangement on Conformity Assessment standardise customs procedures among APEC economies |
achieve common standards of quality and performance for building materials, electrical and electronic equipment and appliances, safety, heating and cooling equipment, and medical devices |
Fair tax treatment (Unfair tax treatment) | eliminate discriminatory taxation
of income or production except in sensitive sectors. All value-added taxes should be
included in the total tax treatment keep floating taxes in reasonable range if they are adopted |
achieve the goal of no less
favourable taxation for foreign enterprises avoid double taxation |
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Policy Recommendations for Promoting Mobility of Business Personnel
Measures to Promote Mobility of Business Personnel |
Short
Term Plan |
Medium
Term Plan |
Promote business travel (Difficulty in obtaining visa) |
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Loosen quota on foreign personnel
(Quota on number of foreign/local workers) |
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Policy Recommendations for Improving Transparency of Trade Regulations
Measures to Improve Transparency of Trade Regulations | Short
Term Plan (implement within 5 years) |
Publicise regulations (Lack of publicity of regulations) |
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Enhance transparency of customs
rules and procedures (Inconsistency/confusion in regulations) |
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Mutually recognise standards and conformance (Inconsistency/confusing implementation) |
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Policy Recommendations for Enhancing Good Trade Policies and Practices
Measures to Enhance Good Trade Policies and Practices | Short
Term Plan (implement within 5 years) |
Promote domestic education and dissemination of information related to administrative barriers to trade |
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Ensure participation of business in trade policy and trade policy making |
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* The items should be in effect immediately.
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