The Rise Of Regionalism In The Multilateral System And Features Of Preferential Trade Agreements In Asia And The Pacific

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The Rise Of Regionalism In The Multilateral System And Features Of Preferential Trade Agreements In Asia And The Pacific Enhancing the contribution of PTAs to inclusive and equitable trade: Islamic Republic of Iran 13-15 August 2017 Tehran

Workshop outline Trade, growth and development Trade protection and liberalization: from efficiency to meeting social objectives PTAs and multilateral trading system and PTAs in Asia-Pacific Trade reforms and PTAs of Islamic Republic of Iran Towards PTA s contribution to inclusive and equitable trade Getting a PTA done: Stakeholders Negotiation Implementation What if the expectations are not met? 2

THE RISE OF REGIONALISM IN THE MULTILATERAL SYSTEM AND FEATURES OF PREFERENTIAL TRADE AGREEMENTS IN ASIA AND THE PACIFIC SESSION 2 3

Key Learning Objectives 1. Legal aspects PTAs under the MTS 2. Understand the mechanisms of trade creation and trade diversion as they apply to PTAs and their welfare effects. 3. Identify the capacity for PTAs to act as building blocks or stumbling blocks with respect to multilateral liberalization. 4. Understand the key issues that arise in making PTAs more compatible with the multilateral system, and the way in which the multilateral system incorporates PTAs. 5. Recall three simple rules of thumb that help ensure PTAs are welfare-enhancing these we will carry forward to other sessions. 6. Be informed of the main trends and developments in the PTAs of the Asia-Pacific countries. 4

Outline 1. Multilateral Trading System and Preferential Liberalization. 2. Economic Analysis of PTAs. 3. Rules of Thumb for Welfare-Enhancing PTAs. 4. Trends and features of PTAs in the Asia-Pacific region. 5

1. Multilateral Trading System - Principles The multilateral trading system (MTS) should be Without discrimination Between countries Between foreign and domestic products Freer Barriers coming down through negotiation Transparency and predictability More competitive More beneficial for less developed countries special and differential It was overseen by GATT (1947-1994) and then WTO (1995- present) 6

1. BASIC WTO PRINCIPLES Non discrimination: MFN (Most Favoured Nation Treatment) NATIONALTREATMENT TRADE TO BE REGULATED BY CUSTOMS DUTY ONLY DUTIESTO BE BOUND 7

FUNCTIONS OF THE WTO Administering WTO trade agreements Forum for trade negotiations Handling trade disputes Monitoring national trade policies Technical assistance for developing countries Cooperation with other international organizations 8

1. Multilateral Trading System and Preferential Liberalization How do the WTO Agreements treat preferential integration? GATT article XXIV legalizes specifically regional trade agreements as: Free Trade Areas (FTAs) or customs unions (FTA + common external tariff) Purpose should be to facilitate intra-bloc trade, not raise barriers against extra-bloc trade Duties cannot be higher than they were prior to the FTA Elimination of duties, etc., affecting substantially all trade Obligation to reduce/eliminate duties over a reasonable length of time period Enabling Clause decision of 1979 - flexibility Similar provisions in the GATS, and some other agreements (see next slide) 9

1. Three sets of rules on PTAs for WTO members GATT Art. XXIV Enabling Clause GATS Art. V Features Main provision of GATT, 1994 Understanding Dictates minimal requirements for PTAs (goods) Elimination of duties and other regulations of commerce on substantially all trade Within a reasonable period of time (Understanding ~10 years) No increase in duties for nonmembers Tokyo Round (1979) rules on preferential trading between developing countries Under its terms, less scrutiny than Art. XXIV. Developing countries can agree to reduce but not eliminate tariffs and other trade barriers and/or be more selective in sectoral coverage Dictates minimal requirements for PTAs (services) Calls for substantial sectoral coverage, and elimination of substantially all discrimination within a reasonable time frame No increase in level of protection for non-members Where developing countries are parties to an agreement there may be (unspecified) flexibility Coverage N-N, N-S PTAs in goods S-S PTAs in goods All PTAs in services WTO Consistency The Czech-Slovakian CU is the only modern PTA that has been formally sanctioned by WTO / GATT In 2006 Members adopted a transparency mechanism based on early announcement and notification to the WTO of any new PTA. Also it provides for a comprehensive factual presentation after adoption followed by a single discussion among the Membership in essence, agnostic on the questions of compliance 10

1. SAT - Test Para 8(a) of Article XXIV of GATT. Trade value? Tariff lines? Both? Being discussed and debated in WTO but no clarity no decision neither in Uruguay Round nor in Doha Round. 11

1. Reasonable Length The reasonable length of time [para 5 (c)] should exceed 10 years only in exceptional cases. In cases where members believe that 10 years is insufficient, they shall provide a full explanation to the Commission for Trade in Goods of the need for a longer period. 12

1. Types of trade agreements Preferential Trade Agreements Free Trade Area Customs Unions Common Market Economic Union Partial preferences to trading partners Elimination of all tariffs, quantitative restrictions and NTBs Common level of trade barriers vis-à-vis non-members Free movement of factors of productions Integration of national economic policies; currency union shallow integration deep integration 13

1. PTA Negotiations Limited items and limited tariff concessions No obligation to eliminate duties within reasonable length of time Positive list approach Request is made to other Parties to give Tariff Preferences on items of export interest Other Party then offers items & MoP Negotiations are held in different Rounds for expanding the items & deepening of concessions Margin of Preference (MoP) Issue reciprocity or non-reciprocity 14

1. FTA Negotiations Different approaches: Article XXIV or Enabling Clause Decide on modality Tariff liberalisation: Negative list approach Time frame to eliminate duties (TLP) Trade/Tariff line coverage Tracks of liberalisation Full offer on the basis of modality Negotiate position of items & TLP 15

16

1. Services in PTAs ArticleV of GATS substantial sectoral coverage (12 sectors 160 subsectors); Elimination of existing discriminatory measures, and/or prohibition of new or more discriminatory measures basis of reasonable time-frame. Flexibility for developing countries either at the entry into force or on the Facilitate trade between parties and to to raise the overall level of barriers to trade in services within the respective sectors or sub-sectors compared to the level applicable prior to such an agreement. 17

1. Multilateral Trading System and Preferential Liberalization The session will be guided by: Multilateral liberalization is always welfare enhancing for small countries, and is desirable for large countries once political economy effects and reciprocity are taken into account. As we know from the literature, preferential liberalization through an agreement with one partner, or a small number of partners, is always ambiguous from an economic welfare point of view, for large and small countries alike. But for a variety of reasons, progress on multilateral liberalization has become difficult, while many countries are moving forward on PTAs. South-South PTAs. North-South PTAs. Mega-Regionals. Are there ways in which countries can multilateralize regionalism? How can the multilateral trading system (MTS) deal with the growth of PTAs? 18

1. Multilateral Trading System and Preferential Liberalization - evolution 1. 1958-1988 N-N regionalism & Quad multilateralism works (70% of world trade) & N unilateralism begins. S-S regionalism fails & South multilateralism fails. 2. 1990 today N-S regionalism takes-off (EU & US with nearby partners). Some S-S regionalism works (Mercosur, SACU). South unilateralism takes-off. Proliferation of minor S-S trade agreements. Multilateralism expands (Single Undertaking). 3. 2000 today East Asian regionalism takes-off (N-S & S-S RTAs). Proliferation of minor trade agreements but also appearance of megaregionals. 19

1. Multilateral Trading System and Preferential Liberalization When looking at the relationship between regionalism and multilateralism, there are two (opposing) arguments The building block (stepping stone) argument Some liberalization is better than none! As more and more countries enter trade agreements and reduce internal tariffs, it becomes easier to negotiate multilateral tariff reductions When major countries conclude trade agreements, others can be spurred to complete multilateral deals so as not to be excluded Think NAFTA in the Uruguay Round 20

1. Multilateral Trading System and Preferential Liberalization The stumbling block argument Countries can become content with preferential liberalization, reducing the incentive to engage in multilateral liberalization Preferential agreements can be paper tigers, and not really prepare the groundwork for additional liberalization North-South preferences create a constituency against multilateral tariff reductions so as to preserve preference margins Think Everything But Arms and EPAs in the Doha Round 21

1. Multilateral Trading System and Preferential Liberalization (summing up the arguments) Building Block Thesis Stumbling Block Thesis Quicker and deeper integration: same goal, different routes through open regionalism Large PTAs increase the incentive for the outsiders to advance multilateral liberalization to minimize trade diversion Improved negotiating power for small units Laboratories for testing new approaches (services, investment, competition policies) PTAs as a development tool: incubator of production and export diversification and strategic integration into world economy PTAs create incentive to resist multilateral liberalization, which would erode preferences by reducing external MFN tariffs Market access preferences are used as bargaining chips by preferencegranting nations against nontrade concessions Specialization of areas, forum shopping Administrative burdens and negotiating capacity constraints Fragmentation of regional rules in new areas and jurisprudence 22

1. Multilateral Trading System and Preferential Liberalization What does the empirical evidence say: Stumbling block USA EU Building block Latin America ASEAN Neither 23 large trading nations 23

1. Multilateral Trading System and Preferential Liberalization Patterns of global sourcing (e.g., for this hard drive) might act as an incentive to multilateralize regionalism, or at least simplify it 24 Source: Baldwin 2006

1. Multilateral Trading System and Preferential Liberalization How to design preferential trade agreements (PTAs) that support, not undermine, the MTS? Maximize trade creation, minimize trade diversion Open regionalism allow accession by countries willing to accept the rules Make increased use of third-party MFN clauses in PTAs Whatever preference is given to a third-party in the future is automatically extended to the original PTA parties 25

1. Multilateral Trading System and Preferential Liberalization How to design PTAs that support, not undermine, the MTS? Simplify, liberalize, and harmonize as far as possible Rules of Origin (ROO) Simplify and harmonize PTAs by macro-region e.g., APEC codes of conduct on trade in goods, TBT, transparency, government procurement, dispute settlement, etc. Pursue deeper integration in a way that is as nondiscriminatory as possible, e.g. general regulatory reform 26

1. Multilateral Trading System and Preferential Liberalization How could the WTO Agreements treat preferential integration? Become more active support the UMP approach Unilateral reform is best Multilateralism and reciprocity is second best Preferential integration is third best Promote multilateral preferential-ism, i.e. agreements that anyone can join, but not everyone does join Information Technology Agreement Government Procurement Agreement Develop a serious review mechanism Simplify and harmonize rules of origin Eliminate sector-specific ROO Require MFN tariff reductions even small ones as the price of entering a PTA 27

Summing up: How to best manage the growth of PTAs? Possible Approaches to Multilateralization 1 2 3 4 Open up Preferential Trade Agreements (PTAs) to easy accession by nonmembers Reduce the margin of preference by liberalizing MFN duties (e.g. in the Doha Round) Harmonize or homologate the rules of origin (ROO) Create new mega regional groups (FTAAP) - this would overlay and supplant smaller PTAs! All PTAs have a discriminatory impact Transparency may improve the function of the market for PTAs : possibly keeping discrimination in check, since the partners must consider the potential demand of third parties for equivalent access 28

2. Economic Analysis of PTAs There is a basic tension in a preferential trade liberalization: PTAs embody discriminatory liberalization Liberalization tends to boost economic efficiency (good) Discrimination tends to reduce economic efficiency (bad) How can we analyze these effects in more detail? (annex) Which effect dominates for particular agreements? 29

2. Economic Analysis of PTAs Let s take a simple example to see what s going on Initial setup Japan imports t-shirts from China and Viet Nam T-shirts from China cost $10 on the world market T-shirts from Viet Nam cost $11 on the world market Japan initially applies a tariff of 20% to t-shirts from both origins Japanese consumers tend to source from China ($12) rather than Viet Nam ($13.20) 30

2. Economic Analysis of PTAs Experiment 1: Japan and China conclude an PTA Assume prices stay the same on the world market: Viet Nam t-shirts are $11, and Chinese ones are $10 In the Japanese market, Chinese t-shirts now sell for $10, but Viet Nam t-shirts still sell for $13.20 Japanese consumers keep sourcing from Chinese suppliers, but the lower price means that they buy more The PTA results in trade creation 31

2. Economic Analysis of PTAs. Experiment 2: Japan and Viet Nam conclude an PTA Assume prices stay the same on the world market: Viet Nam t-shirts are $11, and Chinese ones are $10 In the Japanese market, Chinese t-shirts continue to sell for $12, but Viet Nam ones now sell for $11 Japanese consumers now tend to source from Viet Nam rather than China The PTA results in trade diversion, since Japan s imports are now sourced from a higher cost supplier 32

2. Economic Analysis of PTAs To summarize, Home s preferential tariff to Partner 1. Allows Partner to sell more, and at a better price 2. Means that the Rest of the World sells less, and at a worse price 3. Home expands imports, but has two terms of trade effects Pay more for imports from Partner Pay less for imports from the Rest of the World 4. Home loses some tariff revenue as well (may boost other tax revenues through) 33

2. Economic Analysis of PTAs Traditional trade diversion and creation effects are not the only economic impacts of PTAs PTAs also give access to a larger home market, which enables producers to realize greater scale economies Of course, multilateralism can give rise to an even bigger home market! 34

2. Economic Analysis of PTAs What is beneficial about having a larger home market? Small markets mean that only a few firms can survive Those firms need to charge high prices to be able to survive And the lack of competition makes it possible to do so A larger home market increases firm scale and supports stronger competitive discipline If each firm makes a slightly different product which is what most models assume then a larger market is also linked to greater export diversification 35

2. Economic Analysis of PTAs As markets integrate through regionalism, there is a procompetitive effect that reduces margins And squeezes the least productive firms out of the market Which allows the strongest firms to grow The net result of the shake-out is a smaller number of bigger, more efficient firms facing enhanced competition The economy gains from lower prices and greater consumption (an engine of growth) 36

3. Rules of Thumb for Welfare-Enhancing PTAs Designing PTAs is becoming increasingly complex Sectoral coverage Issue coverage Rules of origin and relationship to other PTAs Relationship with the multilateral system GVCs and global sourcing Is it possible to come up with a few general principles that will help ensure that PTAs are welfare-enhancing for developing countries? Social and environmental issues are considered in the next sessions, which look in detail at coverage and modalities for inclusive PTAs. 37

3. Rules of Thumb for Welfare-Enhancing PTAs 1. Target preferential treatment at low-cost suppliers, preferably world leaders Maximize trade creation Limit trade diversion Implications for South-South RTAs? 38

3. Rules of Thumb for Welfare-Enhancing PTAs 2. Keep preferential and MFN tariffs low Limits the scope for trade diversion Maximizes the probability of trade creation 39

3. Rules of Thumb for Welfare-Enhancing PTAs. 3. Gains are larger from integrating with markets that are Large relative to the home market Have relatively high levels of protection prior to integration Are sufficiently similar to make deep integration a realistic possibility 40

3. Rules of Thumb for Welfare-Enhancing PTAs 4. The risk of trade diversion is diminished, and preference utilization is increased, if liberal rules of origin are included. ROOs should not unduly constrain firms in input choice hinders global competitiveness, and limits preference uptake. If integration is with an otherwise appropriate (competitive) partner, liberal ROOs provide a strong assurance that trade creation will dominate trade diversion, and the agreement will be welfare-enhancing. 41

4. PTA Trends & Characteristics: Global Picture https://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/region_e/regfac_e.htm 42

4. PTA Trends & Characteristics: Asia-Pacific 1. Too many overlapping bilateral RTAs leading to noodle bowl but at the same time fragmentation of the region. 2. Weak capacity to utilize research in setting negotiation strategy/mandate, weak negotiation and implementing capacity. 3. Under-utilization of negotiated preferences. 4. Next generation PTAs may be imposing regulatory regimes that are too advanced. 5. Inclusivity/equality/fairness/sustainability concerns and post-adjustment are not addressed 43

4. Asia-Pacific RTAs As of May 2017, there were 257 RTAs in Asia- Pacific region which are either in force, signed or being negotiated. Globally 274 physical RTAs in force, and 170 (66%) are from AP 15 - signed but not implemented 72 - under different stages of negotiations. 88.2% - cover FTAs, and FTAs and EIAs (having equal share now). 10.6% of the PTAs in force are PSAs Only 1.2% of agreements are classified as customs unions. 44

4. PTAs in force, by type and scope (as of 31 May 2017) Source: ESCAP calculation based on APTIAD data 45

4. Cumulative number of PTAs (notified and non-notified to WTO) put into force by Asia-Pacific economies, by geographical region, 1971-May 2017) Asia-Pacific members of ESCAP are grouped into five sub-regions: East and North-East Asia (ENEA); North and Central Asia (NCA); South-East Asia (SEA); South and South-West Asia (SSWA); and the Pacific. source: ESCAP calculation based on APTIAD data 46

4. Cumulative number of PTAs (notified and non-notified to WTO) put into force by Asia-Pacific economies, by level of development of parties, 1971-May 2017) Source: ESCAP calculation based on APTIAD data 47

48 Marshall Islands Micronesia, Fed. Sts. Mongolia Kiribati Tuvalu Vanuatu Cook Islands Azerbaijan Solomon Islands Maldives Turkmenistan Bangladesh Sri Lanka Niue Russian Federation Macao Iran, Islamic Rep. Kazakhstan Japan Hong Kong, China Pakistan Cambodia India China Tonga Kyrgyz Republic Armenia Vietnam Uzbekistan Nauru Papua New Guinea Fiji Samoa Thailand Tajikistan New Zealand Nepal Philippines Malaysia Indonesia Singapore Turkey Georgia Afghanistan Australia Korea, Rep. Bhutan Lao PDR Myanmar Brunei Import Export 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%

Morocco Mauritius Egypt Bahrain GCC* Jordan Israel Hong Kong, China SAFTA/SATIS Maldives Pakistan ECO Afghanistan Iran, IR Turkey GUAM CIS Uzbekistan Georgia 1994Turkmenistan Azerbaijan Nepal Bhutan BIMSTEC India Sri Lanka Bangladesh APTA Rep. Korea China RCEP Macao, China Taiwan POC Mongolia Kazakhstan Russian Fed. Belarus EAEU Tajikistan Kyrgyzstan Customs Union Armenia Moldova CEZ Ukraine CISFTA ASEAN ECONOMIC COMMUNITY Negotiations Japan-China- Rep. Korea Japan SACU Botswana Lesotho Namibia South Africa Swaziland Other Turkey s PTAs: Albania Bosnia- Herzegovina FYROM Montenegro Palestine Syria** Tunisia ** Suspended Serbia 49 Other Turkey s negotiations or PTAs awaiting ratification: Cameroon Dem. Rep. of Congo Faroe Islands Ghana Kosovo Lebanon Libya Seychelles EU EFTA* Iceland Norway Switzerland Australia New Zealand SPARTECA*/ PACER Plus* PNG @ Fiji PICTA* MSG* Trans-Pacific SEP MERCOSUR Argentina-Brazil Paraguay-Uruguay Colombia Ecuador TPP Bloc-to-bloc or bloc-to-country Country-to-country Under negotiation, awaiting ratification *Not all members shown / @Withdrawals: US (TPP); PNG (PACERPlus) / PTAs not represented: GSTP, D-8 PTA and PTN (in force) and TPS/OIC (under negotiation) Chile Peru Mexico Panama Canada US @ Central America* Costa Rica

4. Trends & Characteristics: Effects of Overlapping PTAs Four main effects (Deardorff, 2014) Trade creation: Import from partner what was previously produced at home Trade diversion: Import from partner what was previously imported from a 3rd country Preference erosion: Loss of a preference when a previous partner forms PTA with a 3rd country Trade reversion: Import from a new partner what had been diverted to a partner in prior PTA Circumvention 50

4. Trends & Characteristics Coverage of Asia-Pacific countries PTAs 51

Conclusion 1. The welfare effects of entering into a PTA are ambiguous due to the potential for trade diversion as well as trade creation. 2. When progress at the multilateral level is challenging, PTAs can seem attractive. Some can be building blocks, others can be stumbling blocks. 3. In designing and implementing PTAs, it is important to make them as compatible as possible with the multilateral system. 4. GVCs and complex global sourcing are additional reasons for simplifying and harmonizing PTAs, as well as multilateralizing them. 5. Asia-Pacific approach to PTAs noodle bowl and associated effects 52

Post training exercise Time 30 minutes 53

Exercise 1 How do you define SAT? Tariff lines Trade Value Both Reasonable length of time? General rule vrs PSRs? Single undertaking or step by step approach? 54

Exercise 2 Can N-S FTAs like use enabling clause of GATT or it has to be under Article XXIV of GATT? How can parties renegotiate such FTAs that are already signed and implemented? Which components can be renegotiated? In FTA negotiations, what should be the base rate of tariff liberalisation: WTO bound or the applied MFN rates? If applied tariff rate, should the rate be on the date of imports or a fixed base rate with reference to a specific date? If applied MFN at x% was used as the base rate but later a party increased its MFN applied rate to x+, can the party change its base rate to x+? Are FTAs under enabling clause required to go to zero duty or can be even higher than zero? What about the SAT clause? 55

56 Thank You

Annex Technical demonstration of trade creation and trade diversion (Economic analysis of PTAs) 57

Economic Analysis of PTAs. In economic terms, the tension of PTAs is summarized by the two concepts of trade creation and trade diversion. The example considered a single market. In reality, a PTA covers many sectors and can go beyond goods so analyzing net effects is very complex. At the end of the session, we will develop some rules of thumb for helping ensure that trade creation dominates, which makes the PTA welfare-enhancing. 58

Economic Analysis of PTAs. Baseline: Free trade equilibrium RoW Partner Home Border price Border price Domestic price XS R XS P MS 1 2 P FT MD X R RoW Exports X P Partner Exports M=X P +X R Home imports 59

Economic Analysis of PTAs. RoW Border price Part 2: MFN tariff Border price Partner Home Domestic price Step 1: Work out new MS. MS MFN XS R XS P MS 1 2 P FT MD X R RoW Exports X P Partner Exports M=X P +X R Home imports 60

Economic Analysis of PTAs. RoW Border price Part 2: MFN tariff Border price Partner Home Domestic price Step 2: Find p s & q s. MS MFN XS R XS P MS P -T 1 2 T P FT P MD X R RoW Exports X R X P X P Partner Exports M M=X P +X R Home imports 61

Economic Analysis of PTAs. Border price RoW Border price Part 3: Preferential liberalization Partner Domestic price Home MS MFN Step 1: Work out new MS. XS R XS P MS PTA MS (free trade) P P -T MD RoW Exports X R X P Partner Exports M Home imports 62

Economic Analysis of PTAs. Border price RoW Border price Partner Domestic price Home MS MFN Step 2: Find p s & q s. MS PTA XS R XS P MS (free trade) P -T P -T P P T P MD RoW Exports Partner Exports X R X R X P X P M M Home imports 63

Economic Analysis of PTAs. (3) P -T P -T Border price Part 3: Preferential liberalization XS R T Border price XS P P P -T (2) Domestic price P (1) MS MFN MS PTA MS P MD X R X R X P X P M M RoW Exports Partner Exports Home imports 64

Economic Analysis of PTAs. Part 3: Preferential liberalization Border price Border price Domestic price XS R XS P MS MFN MS PTA P -T P -T T P P -T P MS P MD X R X R X P X P M M RoW Exports Partner Exports Home imports 65

Economic Analysis of PTAs. Border price RoW XS R Part 3: Preferential liberalization welfare effects Border price Partner XS P Domestic price Home A P -T P -T E P D P P P -T P -T C B MD X R X R X P X P X R M M RoW Exports Partner Exports Home imports 66

Economic Analysis of PTAs. To summarize, Home s preferential tariff to Partner 1. Allows Partner to sell more, and at a better price (D) 2. Means that the Rest of the World sells less, and at a worse price (E) 3. Home expands imports (A), but has two terms of trade effects Pay more for imports from Partner (A) Pay less for imports from the Rest of the World (B) 4. Home loses some tariff revenue (C) 67