Free trade agreements cannot be
credited for the increase in intra-Asian trade as they are often restrictive in
scope and difficult to implement, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said today.
Despite the fact that there were 190 FTAs involving at least one Asian country at the last count in January, only a small percentage of the region's exporters and importers are using the agreements, the ADB said.
Despite the fact that there were 190 FTAs involving at least one Asian country at the last count in January, only a small percentage of the region's exporters and importers are using the agreements, the ADB said.
"There is a misperception
about FTAs," head of the the ADB's Office of Regional Economic Integration
Iwan Azis said.
"Is this increased trend of intra-Asian trade because of the growing number of FTAs in the region? My short answer is definitely no," he said at the launch of the bank's latest report, Asian Economic Integration Monitor.
"Is this increased trend of intra-Asian trade because of the growing number of FTAs in the region? My short answer is definitely no," he said at the launch of the bank's latest report, Asian Economic Integration Monitor.
Azis said the Manila-based ADB
had carried out a survey of how many importers and exporters in Asia were using
the FTAs and the percentages were 'very small'.
About 55 per cent of Asia's total
trade was done within the region in 2011, up from 45 per cent 10 years ago, he
said, adding that the increase was mainly due to 'unilateral liberalisation' by
economies.
It was driven by market
conditions as Asian countries traded more with each other as the eurozone debt
crisis and feeble US economic recovery curbed demand for the region's exports.
Azis, however, said that FTAs in
the future can help boost intra-Asian trade if their conflicting provisions are
harmonised and implemented.
"Yes, the number of FTAs has
been growing but it's becoming a noodle bowl," he said.
The proliferation of FTAs
"has created a tangled web of overlapping bilateral and plurilateral trade
arrangements," ADB said in its report.
"While these are clear
evidence of regional cooperation, they are often restrictive in scope and not
all aspects are easy to implement," it said.
"Differences across FTAs
such as varying schedules for phasing out tariffs, different rules of origin
and exclusion lists, and differences in rules on anti-dumping can limit their
effectiveness and weaken efficiency," the report said.
FTAs have proliferated worldwide,
including in Asia, after talks under the Doha round of the World Trade
Organisation (WTO) collapsed in 2006 largely due to disagreements over farm
subsidies.
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