Davao business sector confident to benefit from foreign trade agreements
By Lovely A. Carillo
DAVAO
CITY, Jan. 23 (PNA) – Davao business sector is confident to benefit
from the full implementation of the ASEAN-China Free Trade Area (ACFTA)
which effected January 1st of 2010.
Former
Davao City Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Inc. (DCCCII) president
Simeon Marfori said Dabawenyos, and even the whole country, can expect
to feel birth pains from the agreement in the long term.
Marfori
said it took the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) almost
a decade to implement the world’s third largest regional agreement that
is expected to cover almost two billion people from the areas covered
by member countries of the ACFTA including China and the six founding
ASEAN members--Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore and
Thailand.
The two other agreements being that of the European Union (EU) and the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).
“Free
trade will always be initially painful since it will make things a bit
different from what we have become accustomed to economy-wise, as we
will be competing with products from the other areas in terms of
production, quality and price,” he said.
Marfori,
who has officially turned over the Chamber presidency to Engr. Robert
Quinto last December, said this would mean equal footing for all
competitors not only in the local market but especially in the ASEAN
market.
After the adjustment period, he said, Davao can expect an overall positive effect from the agreement.
“The best that we can expect from the ACFTA is low prices of consumer goods,” he said.
Davao
City, he added, has a competitive advantage over the other countries
when it comes to agriculture, mining, services and manpower.
Dabawenyos
should however realize that the key to being competitive is to produce
products which we can produce at the least possible cost so we can sell
it at a cheaper rate compared to our competitors, he said.
“It
means we should not insist on producing onion as an agricultural
product if we incur a higher cost than say China, or some other
countries that can produce the commodity at a lower cost,” he said.
Marfori
said Davao already has a winner in its banana products for import, both
the upland and the lowland. There are other fruits and crops we have
not really fully explored in the export market including pineapples and
pomelos, he added.
As
a result of the ACFTA, the founding countries of ASEAN are required to
eliminate tariffs and other investment barriers on up to 90 percent of
products from textiles, to vegetable oils and steel, effective January
1 this year.
Exempted
from this are later ASEAN members including Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia and
Myanmar, which will only cut the tariffs gradually until they totally
eliminate tariff by 2015.
But
while the agreement is a shout-out to the whole world that ASEAN is
open for business, not all countries are ready for freer trade. Even
the agreement itself has been criticized for lack of a rigorous
mechanism when it comes to settling disputes, he said.
Some
ASEAN countries are also fearful of China’s effects on their economies,
considering the low price of products from the said area even before
the agreement took effect.
On
the other hand, Quinto said when it comes to competition under the
ACFTA, “we are at an advantage because we are an exporting country and
our agribusiness products do not really compete against China.”
However,
Quinto admitted that "we will be the loser when it comes to the
manufacturing sector because no one can beat China when it comes to
price." He admitted that we do not face any chance of winning against
China when it comes to the production of microchips.
“But
with or without the removal of tariff or the implementation of the Free
Trade, we will always be a winner when the Philippine Peso has a
cheaper conversion rate as against the US dollar as it would make our
products cheaper in the world market,” he said.
Fears
about the effects of the ACFTA implementation are valid but the
agreement will have different impacts on the ASEAN members. Grassroots
level farmers in South East Asia are expected to benefit from the
opportunity to export agricultural products to China under very
competitive terms, thanks to the ACFTA Early Harvest Programme.
However,
these very same farmers will now have to compete with imported products
from China that are more competitive. Indonesia has indicated this
nervousness earlier when several associations asked for the temporary
exemption of eleven additional industries from the agreement to include
tools, transportation, steel and iron, plastic, electronics, footwear,
food and beverages, forestry and plantations, machinery, creative
industries and downstream chemical industry.
Marfori
said while the full implementation has started early this month, he
doubts they will be able to fully implement the new tariff rates since
he believes there is as yet no Implementing Rules and Regulations and
even the Bureau of Customs has not yet released the list of new tariff
rates.
“This
means there is still time to prepare and to do that, both the
government and the private sector should work together to make sure
that the agriculture sector is given the right training and
technology,” he said.
While
there has been little preparation time for the private sector, he said,
we have been more or less prepared by the World Trade Organization
which is a grander agreement. The private sector has a lot of things to
do like getting more investments. The government too, he said, should
now work closely with the private sector so they can get their acts
together.
The
ACFTA is seen as the largest agreement yet in terms of population. It
is expected to create total trade of about 1.23 trillion dollars and
regional Gross Domestic Product of about two trillion dollars. But more
than the figures, the agreement is expected to bolster trade between
ASEAN and China at a dramatic pace, considering that this is already
happening even before the ACFTA, with China’s share in the total trade
of ASEAN increasing from 2.1 percent in 1994 to seven percent in 2003.
The
ASEAN’s largest trading partner at present is the United States with 14
percent total trade, followed by Japan with 13.7 percent, European
Union with 11.5 percent and now China with seven percent. This is
expected to grow further with the implementation of the ACFTA.
Davao
City is expected to take part in this growth, with the help of its
export products, with agriculture on top of the list. The city also has
an existing sisterhood agreement with Nanning, and it considers this
already a step towards the right direction, hopefully leading to some
benefits when ACFTA is finally fully implemented in the real world.
(PNA)
FFC/LAC/lvp
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