MANILA, Philippines – State-owned think tank Philippine Institute
for Development Studies (PIDS) said Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) are only
political agreements more than economic.
In an interview with Rappler,
PIDS President Josef Yap said pursuing FTAs at this time will not help the
Philippines see rapid investments growth.
The government is aiming to
increase its investment rate to 25% to place it at par with its ASEAN neighbors
who have been attaining this level of investment rate growth and more in the
past few years.
"We can go slow [with] FTAs.
They are 'trade-light' [so they are] more of a political signal [that] we are
willing to cooperate with [them and] we don’t want to be left behind," Yap
said. "So [we shouldn’t] aggressively seek to enter FTAs with other
countries. [We have to] focus more on our domestic issues, supply side
constraints."
FTAs 'trade-light'?
Yap said the main reason why FTAs
are considered more political is because they are trade-light. He said this
means that FTAs carry too many exemptions when it comes to trade.
In the case of the Philippines,
if it undertakes an FTA that is 'trade-heavy,' he said the country would
liberalize commodities such as rice and sugar. Liberalizing means bringing down
tariffs to zero.
"The agreements are not very
extensive, you don't really liberalize. To give you an example, if the FTA were
trade heavy, we would liberalize rice, we would liberalize sugar, (and) there
will be very, very few exemptions. But since FTAs always give you, as they are
currently structured, a lot of leeway for exemptions then they are
trade-light," Yap explained.
Under the World Trade
Organization (WTO), the Philippines slaps a tariff of 40% for rice that comes
in within the so-called Minimum Access Volume (MAV) pegged at 350,000 metric
tons. Outside of this MAV, imports are slapped a duty of 50%.
MAV is the minimum volume for
specific agricultural products that members of the WTO have agreed to allow to
enter their borders at lower-than-regular tariff rates.
Under the ASEAN Free Trade Area
(AFTA) agreement, tariff rates for imported sugar into the country are
scheduled to go down to 18% next year, 10% in 2014, and 5% in 2015. The tariff
for sugar has started to decline to 28% this year from 38% last year.
The Department of Trade and
Industry (DTI) said that in the case of the Philippines, tariffs for rice and
sugar will be reduced but will not fall to zero by 2015.
"For the Philippines, too,
tariffs on rice and sugar have been maintained at previous levels of 40% and
38%, respectively as a result of the waiver for the special consideration for
rice and sugar. As agreed, rice tariffs will be unified to 35% in 2015 while
sugar tariff will be reduced to 5% in the same year," the Trade Department
noted.
Maximizing FTAs
Yap said that this, however, does
not discount the fact that FTAs are a great source of technological know-how
for the Philippines. He said this is one of the ways by which FTAs can help
local firms become competitive.
He explained that many FTAs are
focused on technical cooperation. This means countries who engage in these
agreements can get assistance in obtaining new technology or knowledge about a
certain technology or skill that its partner country has a competitive
advantage over.
The PIDS official said technical
assistance would greatly contribute to the country’s goal of increasing firm’s
competitiveness and should be maximized by the Philippines.
He said that to maximize FTAs,
especially the Philippine-Japan Economic Partnership Agreement (PJEPA), there
should be more information on what these FTAs contain so that firms nationwide
would be able to know how they can benefit from these agreements.
"The advantage of these
FTAs, especially PJEPA, they contain technical cooperation which can help with
our firm level competitiveness. There are a lot of areas where you can
cooperate. There's infrastructure, sophisticated technologies. That’s where we
have to use the FTAs. That’s where we have to exploit the FTAs," Yap said.
Rappler.com
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