Improved trade facilitation can reduce costs in Asia, Pacific: ADB, ESCAP

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DHAKA, Sept 5, 2017 (BSS)-Improved trade facilitation – the simplification, modernization, and harmonization of export and import processes – can reduce trade costs by up to 9 percent in Asia and the Pacific, according to a new joint report by the ADB and ESCAP.

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) launched the report today on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Trade Facilitation Forum in Yogyakarta, said a media release.

The report, ‘Trade Facilitation and Better Connectivity for an Inclusive Asia and Pacific,’ highlights the benefits of better trade facilitation in the region such as promoting customs improvements and cross-border cooperation among countries, with the implementation of the provisions under the World Trade Organization’s (WTO) Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) which entered into force in February of this year.

Partial implementation of the TFA, for instance, could reduce trade costs in the region by 5 percent annually, while full implementation would yield a 9 percent reduction in costs – or $219 billion of savings every year.

“Trade facilitation increases trade flows and lowers trade costs, making it critical for development in Asia and the Pacific,” said Yasuyuki Sawada, ADB’s Chief Economist.

“We’re hopeful that the findings of the report can further help our development partners in improving trade facilitation and paperless trade implementation in the region,” Yasuyuki Sawada added.

The report features findings of a global survey on trade facilitation and paperless trade implementation, revealing various improvements across the region. The region marked improvements in general trade facilitation, paperless trade, and cross-border paperless trade, with the average implementation rate rising to 50.4 percent in 2017 from 46.5 percent in 2015. Subregionally, East Asia has the highest implementation rate at 73.7 percent after Australia and New Zealand (85.0%).

Digitalization, along with institutional coordination, is seen as a great tool to further enhance trade facilitation implementation and reduce trade costs. The analysis in the report suggests that going fully “paperless” when implementing the measures in the WTO TFA could help reduce trade costs in the region by 16 percent, instead of just 9 percent.

“The Framework Agreement on Facilitation of Cross-Border Paperless Trade in Asia and the Pacific can accelerate implementation of digital trade procedures in the region,” said Hong Joo Hahm, ESCAP’s Deputy Executive Secretary.

“Three countries already formally signed this new UN treaty last week: Bangladesh, Cambodia, and the People’s Republic of China. It is a promising start, and we look forward to more countries joining soon,” Hong Joo Hahm added.

The report also highlights the efforts to improve trade facilitation in major subregional cooperation initiatives like the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) and the South Asia Subregional Economic Cooperation (SASEC). In the Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation (CAREC) area, for example, the report finds that a 10 percent reduction in time at the border could lead to an increase in trade by 2%-3%.