APEC Leads Breakthrough Trade Pact Implementation Push
APEC Leads Breakthrough Trade Pact Implementation
Push
Issued by the APEC Sub-Committee on Customs
Procedures
Nha Trang, Viet Nam, 26 February 2017 – APEC member economies are moving quickly
to implement the newly ratified Trade Facilitation
Agreement, the first multilateral trade deal under the World
Trade Organization. They are intent on realizing its
potential to boost trade participation and growth across the
Asia-Pacific.
The Trade Facilitation Agreement, which
entered into force this week after two-thirds of the WTO’s
164 members ratified it, will simplify their customs
procedures, making it easier, faster and cheaper to securely
move goods across borders. Negotiations concluded in Bali in
December 2013, bolstered by the support of APEC Leaders there two months
earlier.
Customs officials from APEC economies
conducting technical exchanges in Nha Trang, Viet Nam to
accelerate implementation of the agreement hailed the news
and its implications for fair trade.
“APEC economies
are on the verge of full ratification of the Trade
Facilitation Agreement and working closely to expedite
adoption of its provisions,” noted Vu Ngoc Anh, Chair of
the APEC Sub-Committee on Customs
Procedures, which administers regional policy
cooperation within the sector. “Modernizing our customs
systems in-line with the agreement will improve goods flows
at borders and make it easier for businesses to trade in the
region.”
“Trade facilitating measures put into
practice in APEC have already saved importers and exporters
billions of dollars and fostered conditions for enhanced
trade and economic growth,” explained Vu, who is also
Deputy Director-General of Viet Nam Customs. “The steps we
are now taking to reduce the time and cost of customs
compliance and doing business in the region will open up
trade further, particularly among smaller scale producers
and suppliers.”
To date, 19 out of 21 APEC economies
have ratified the Trade Facilitation Agreement which is
projected to increase global trade by up to USD1 trillion
annually. Collaborative implementation efforts in APEC are
focused on enabling actions such as the deployment of single
window systems that provide one location for the filing of
regulatory documentation as well as designating Authorized
Economic Operators that offer faster customs clearance of
goods to qualifying traders and improving these programs.
Parallel emphasis ranges from support for transition
from paper-based to electronic processes and the application
of information technologies, to managing risk. Complexities
include rising e-commerce growth and the challenges it
creates for customs and other agencies in controlling the
cross-border flow of goods. Officials are moreover sharing
guidance on coordination across agencies and business to
better orient them to the changing customs environment.
“Customs authorities in APEC understand the
requirements of the Trade Facilitation Agreement and
practical guidelines developed by the World Customs
Organization for the harmonized institution of customs
procedures. They just need to continue what they’re
doing,” said Toshihiko Osawa, Technical Officer at the
Compliance and Facilitation Directorate of the World Customs
Organization. “Non-APEC members can learn from APEC
lessons and experiences.”
“Trade Facilitation
Agreement implementation is well on its way in APEC,”
echoed Shiumei Lin, Vice President of Public Affairs,
Asia-Pacific at UPS. “Advancing work in the region to
address deeper issues impacting supply chains like
transportation, domestic regulations and policy coordination
and coherence will help to build on this progress and
optimize the trading environment for all,” she concluded.