RCEP:
Asia’s next economic growth frontier
The
next round of negotiations for the Regional Comprehensive Economic
Partnership (RCEP), a proposed 16-nation free-trade area that would be the
world's largest such bloc, takes place June 12-18 in Auckland, New Zealand.
The RCEP, largely being spearheaded
by China and India, encompassing 3.4 billion people, is the huge Asian wide
equivalent of the now stalled Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade pact.
The
RCEP encompasses all 10 ASEAN member countries plus China, Japan, the ROK,
Australia, New Zealand and India. The 10 members of ASEAN are – Brunei,
Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore,
Thailand, and Vietnam.
RCEP
negotiations were officially launched in May 2013. The population of its
member countries account for 50% of the total world population, with the GDP,
trade volume and foreign direct investment utilization of the member
countries estimated at about one third of the global total.
The
impact of RCEP on ASEAN
Experts
at a conference organized by the Foreign Trade University on May 21 in Hanoi
to discuss the pros and cons of the RCEP said the trade pact carries with it
many economic benefits for ASEAN and Vietnam.
“Most
importantly it would unify trade standards across ASEAN,” said Ta Kim Ngoc,
an associate professor at the Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences, which would
be a boon to local companies.
Mr
Ngoc said the TPP is divisive with respect to ASEAN. Currently the TPP talks
include only the four ASEAN member states of Brunei, Malaysia, Singapore, and
Vietnam.
The
lack of the other six members poses a serious threat to internal economic
integration of the ASEAN region, said Mr Ngoc, citing the issue of regulatory
coordination of intellectual property rights as just one example.
Harmonizing
intellectual property rights as defined by the TPP with the remaining six non
TPP member countries would be virtually impossible. However, RCEP would allow
all ASEAN members to implement compatible laws with respect to these rights.
Moreover,
Dao Ngoc Tien, an associate professor from the Hanoi Foreign Trade
University, put forth the proposition that the welfare effects of the TPP on
ASEAN as a whole are unduly complex and unpredictable.
Most
importantly, said Mr Tien, they have a destabilizing effect on ASEAN.
Recent
studies show the TPP deal favours the four ASEAN members as trade partners
such as the US and Japan divert some of their trade to countries such as
Vietnam and Malaysia for preferable tariff treatment.
By
contrast, the RCEP does not carry with it this unsettling negative effect to
ASEAN, he said.
It
is also likely, said Mr Tien, that the TPP will detrimentally influence the
global value chain of some specific industries and segments of the economy
away from ASEAN.
For
example, he said, Cambodia and Laos, two of the fastest-growing economies in
Asia, may miss chances to improve manufacturing productivity and advance
sustainable development by participating in global supply chains as US and
Japanese companies move their assembly lines to TPP member countries in Latin
America.
In
substance, he said, ASEAN already has FTAs with the six partners – China,
India, Japan, the Republic of Korea and Australia, and New Zealand. RCEP is
therefore simply a logical expansion of a trade relationship that is already
in existence.
RCEP,
would therefore act as a stable platform for cooperation as opposed to the
TPP, which is characterized on the precept of competition and set the stage
allowing for RCEP to emerge as Asia’s next economic growth frontier.
VOV
|
Thứ Ba, 31 tháng 5, 2016
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét