130 likes | 247 Views
Trade Facilitation and Transport. Global Economic Prospects 2004 ECA Briefing John S. Wilson April 28, 2003. Chapter Themes. Trade Facilitation – More than Transport New Measurement Tools - Critical Security and Trade - Potential Win-Win
E N D
Trade Facilitation and Transport Global Economic Prospects 2004 ECA Briefing John S. Wilson April 28, 2003
Chapter Themes • Trade Facilitation – More than Transport • New Measurement Tools - Critical • Security and Trade - Potential Win-Win • WTO Negotiations – Potential Benefit – TA Framework Critical
Wilson, Mann and Otsuki (2003) • Econometric approach – gravity model • Define trade facilitation as: • Port efficiency, Customs environment, Regulatory environment and E-commerce Usage • Generate results for trade gains • Raising below-average members half-way to APEC average intra-APEC trade raised by $254 billion
New Analysis for GEP 2004 • Wilson, Mann, Otsuki (mimeo) • Dataset – 75 countries • Importer and exporter improvements considered
Data Sources 1. Port Efficiency 2. Customs Environment • Domestic Regulatory Environment • E-business usage • World Economic Forum Global Competitiveness Report (GCR) • IMD Lausanne, World Competitiveness Yearbook (WCY) • Kaufmann, Kraay and Zoido-Lobaton (KKZ)
Tentative Findings • Total global export gains - $350 billion - $40 billion accrued to ECA region. • Trade gains from improvements in exporter ($250 billion) much greater than from importers’ improvements ($100 billion).
Overview of Simulation: Bring Below-Average Countries Half-way to up to the Global Average(Gains in billions of US dollar)
Increase in Exports by Region and Trade Facilitation Measure
Security and Trade Facilitation • Doubling number of terrorist incidents between 1968-1979 led to a 6% decrease in bilateral trade between the targeted economies (Nitsch and Schumacher, 2002). • Enhanced security fosters private investment and growth in developing economies Poirson (1998). Private investment in the short run increased by 0.5 to 1 percentage point of GDP, in countries that adopted security measures in ‘best practice’ regions. Economic growth rose by 0.5 to 1.25 percentage points per year in the long term. • The Bali bombing 2002 - tourists to Indonesia declined by 2.2 percent – costing 1% of its GDP
Security Conclusions…. • Necessary to ensure that less developed countries are not excluded from the plan of balancing security with trade facilitation objectives. • Potential Win-Win situation - higher costs can be recovered through greater efficiencies in the supply chain. • Need Coordinated Multilateral Plan – G-8 and Developing Countries.
WTO Negotiations? • GATT Article V- Freedom of transit • GATT Article VIII- Fees and formalities connected with imports and exports • GATT Article X- Publication and administration of trade regulations
Tentative Conclusions….. • Trade facilitation – development context central role. • WTO negotiations – Beneficial but need coordinated development plan - WCO, World Bank, bilateral donors, private sector.