regional trade liberalization project known as AFTA. The member states’ primary aim
was to accelerate trade liberalization and improve upon the provisions in the old
2
agreement on ASEAN Preferential Trading Arrangements signed in 1977. The belief
was that a free-trade area would benefit member states by increasing trade,
investment,
production opportunities, and foreign exchange earnings.
At the heart of the AFTA declaration was the Agreement on the Common Effective
Preferential Tariff (CEPT) Scheme. Article 4 of the CEPT agreement stated that member
states would progressively reduce tariff rates on manufactured goods to 0-5% by 2008.
i
Fifteen product groups (i.e., vegetable oil, cement, chemicals, pharmaceuticals,
fertilizers, plastics, rubber products, leather products,
textiles, ceramic products, glass
products, gems and jewelry, copper cathodes, electronics, and wooden and rattan
furniture) were chosen for the fast-track program, which would reduce tariffs to 5% or
less by 2003. Other products included in the CEPT scheme were put on the normal track,
whereby tariffs would fall to 5% or less by 2008.
To qualify for preferential tariffs, at least 40% of the value-added of a product on an
importing ASEAN member’s inclusion list had to be of ASEAN origin. Once a product
was included in the CEPT scheme, quantitative restrictions had to be eliminated
immediately while other non-tariff barriers had to be removed within five years. ASEAN
members could exclude products from the CEPT in three cases: 1) Temporary exclusions,
2) Sensitive agricultural products, and 3) General exceptions. Temporary exclusions
referred to products for which tariffs would ultimately be lowered to 0-5%, but which
were being protected temporarily by a delay in tariff reductions.
ii
Sensitive agricultural
products included agricultural raw materials or unprocessed products covered under
Chapters 01-24 of the Harmonized System (HS), and similar agricultural raw materials or
unprocessed products in other related HS categories. General exceptions referred to
products which a country deemed necessary for the protection of national security, public
morals, the protection of human, animal or plant life and health, and protection of articles
of artistic, historic, or archeological value.
The original scheme was revised in 1994 at the twenty sixth ASEAN Economic Ministers
meeting. The tariff-reduction schedule was accelerated so tariff rates would be 0-5% by
2000 for fast-track products and by 2003 for normal-track products. At the same meeting,
the ASEAN Economic Ministers also agreed to implement the AFTA Council’s
recommendations to bring some agricultural products into the CEPT and to transfer
products from the temporary exclusion list to the inclusion list in five stages. In 1993, the
trade value of all products included in the CEPT covered 85% of total intra-ASEAN and
86% of total ASEAN trade. Malaysia and Singapore began implementing the CEPT
agreement starting in 1993, Brunei Darussalam in 1994, Indonesia and Thailand in 1995,
and the Philippines in 1996. It was expected that the simple average tariff of CEPT
products would decline from 13.40 % in 1993 to 2.63 % in 2008.
iii
Between 1994 and 1998, ASEAN member countries further enhanced trade liberalization
in the region by eliminating non-tariff barriers and quantitative restrictions; harmonizing
customs nomenclature, valuation, and procedures; and developing common product-
certification standards. In 1995, ASEAN signed framework agreements for the intra-
regional liberalization of trade in services and for regional cooperation in intellectual
3
property rights. The AFTA project became more formal and binding with the signing of
the Protocol on ASEAN Dispute Settlement Mechanism (DSM) in 1996. The ASEAN
DSM would provide an expeditious and transparent way of settling disputes among
member states regarding the implementation of ASEAN economic agreements. In the
same year, the ASEAN Industrial Cooperation Scheme (AICO), whose main objective
was to promote joint manufacturing industrial activities between ASEAN-based
companies, was launched.
iv
The expansion of ASEAN to include Vietnam in 1995, Laos and Myanmar in 1997, and
Cambodia in 1999 widened the AFTA project as all four countries were required to sign
on to the AFTA agreement in order to join ASEAN. In light of their later accession to
the CEPT Agreement, the new member countries (the so-called CLMV countries) were
scheduled to meet their tariff reduction obligations a few years later than the original
ASEAN members. Vietnam was expected to realize AFTA in 2006, Laos and Myanmar
in 2008, and Cambodia in 2010. Although the CEPT scheme had operated with strictly
reciprocal preferences, the original ASEAN members later agreed in 2001 to unilaterally
extend tariff preferences to ASEAN's new members from 2002 onwards so that
integration of the CLMV countries would be accelerated.
Spurred by the Asian Financial Crisis, ASEAN Leaders agreed at the sixth ASEAN
Summit in 1998 to bring forward the establishment of AFTA to the year 2002 instead of
2003 for the six original signatories to the CEPT Agreement. Members also agreed to
adopt a harmonized tariff nomenclature by 2000. In addition, to encourage intra-regional
investment and production that would complement the AICO, a framework agreement on
the ASEAN Investment Area was signed.
Dostları ilə paylaş: