1 / 22

Implementing a Pro-poor Trade Strategy for Cambodia

Implementing a Pro-poor Trade Strategy for Cambodia High Level Regional Conference On Trade Related Capacity Development For Selected East Asian Countries 5 February 2008 Phnom Penh-Cambodia. Overview. Trade Integration Strategy 2007;

odina
Download Presentation

Implementing a Pro-poor Trade Strategy for Cambodia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Implementing a Pro-poor Trade Strategy for Cambodia High Level Regional Conference On Trade Related Capacity Development For Selected East Asian Countries 5 February 2008 Phnom Penh-Cambodia

  2. Overview • Trade Integration Strategy 2007; • Trade Sector Wide Approach, from developing to implementing a Strategy; • UNDP Trade Related Technical Assistance

  3. Cambodia’s 2007 Trade Integration Strategy Cambodia IF experience • In 2000, Cambodia was designated as one of three pilot countries under the Integrated Framework (IF). • The first DTIS was fairly successful in terms of both outcomes and process. • Institutional weakness and lack of appropriate structure

  4. Cambodia’s 2007 Trade Integration Strategy Critical and Timely • Takes stock of Cambodia’s successful integrationinto the world economy; • Potential new products and markets; • It recognizes the changing nature of competitivenessin international markets; • Strengthen positive linkages between export development and poverty reduction

  5. Cambodia’s 2007 Trade Integration Strategy Four Goals • Identify potential priority products and servicesto strengthen and diversify Cambodia’s export base. • Identify bottlenecks common or specific to those priority export sectors to be removed in order to promote their development; • Link more clearly trade sector development to poverty-reductionand sustainable human development • Serve as a basis to formulate trade sector development objectivesto be implemented through a Trade SWAp

  6. Cambodia’s 2007 Trade Integration Strategy

  7. Cambodia’s 2007 Trade Integration Strategy

  8. Cambodia’s 2007 Trade Integration Strategy Cross-Cutting Legal and Institutional Issues • Trade Facilitation (Twelve Point Action Plan); • Investment Facilitation (Strong Focus on SEZs and targeted investment promotion); • TBTs (Law on Standards, access to internationally recognized conformity certification); • SPS (strong focus on plant health and animal health –especially for fish); • IPRs (trademark, patents, Geographical Indications); • Work Program of RGC resulting from WTO Accession

  9. Cambodia’s 2007 Trade Integration Strategy Sector Specific Issues • Producers’ ability to meet SPS, technical standards, IPRs at product/service sector level. Ability of extension-service-type infrastructure to deliver service and train producers; • Exporters’ ability to obtain market opportunity information and access international distribution channels. Ability of product/business associations to provide such support; • Entrepreneurial and managerial capacity at product sector level; • Access to skill labor, including through sector-specific training schemes; • Access to investment and technology to increase processing capacity

  10. Cambodia’s 2007 Trade Integration Strategy Sector Specific Issues • Producers’ ability to meet SPS, technical standards, IPRs at product/service sector level. Ability of extension-service-type infrastructure to deliver service and train producers; • Exporters’ ability to obtain market opportunity information and access international distribution channels. Ability of product/business associations to provide such support; • Entrepreneurial and managerial capacity at product sector level; • Access to skill labor, including through sector-specific training schemes; • Access to investment and technology to increase processing capacity

  11. From DTIS to Trade SWAp • The next immediate challenge for Cambodia is to capitalize on the key findings of our 2007 Trade Integration Strategy and turn them into a well-focused Action Program for trade development. • The Trade Sector Wide Approach (SWAp)will be the critical instrument for Cambodia to meet this next challenge. Strong coordination among the Government, Cambodian trade stakeholders, and Development Partners will be key to ensuring the continued successful integration of Cambodia in the global economy.

  12. From DTIS to Trade SWAp Trade SWAp? • A mechanism to plan and coordinate human, institutional, and financial resources of the Cambodian Government, Cambodian stakeholders and Development Partners for the purpose of strengthening trade sector development; • A mechanism based on a single and shared strategy (DTIS 2007) and a limited set of shared objectives (the three “pillars” of the Trade SWAp); • A mechanism guided and monitored by the Sub-Steering Committee on Trade Development and Trade-Related Investment under MoC leadership

  13. Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy (DTIS 2007) 3 Years Rolling Plan

  14. From DTIS to Trade SWAp Program Objectives: • Identify, eliminate, and/ or lessen legal, institutional and human capacity bottlenecks; • Identify and promote the development of a set of priority product and service sectors; • Strengthen the capacity of the RGC, and MoC in particular, to manage Cambodia’s trade development agenda; • Gear trade sector development efforts towards increasing their positive contribution to human development and poverty reduction (“mainstreaming”)

  15. From DTIS to Trade SWAp Process: from a Diagnostic to a Strategy formulation towards its Implementation • For each Pillar: a “shepherd” and a Government Focal Point will identify the main Pillar’s objectives, targets and indicators; • Individual MoC departments and selected departments from other key ministries (for example, MIME, MAFF, others) will identify 1-year and three-year work plans to support achievement of each main sub-objective • Work plans will be costed; existing resources and gaps will be identified; • Three-year costed work plans will be consolidated into a Trade SWAp three-year rolling plan (MTEF); • New resources will be mobilized;

  16. From DTIS to Trade SWAp “Pillar 3”: Human and Institutional Capacity Development- Possible Themes • Support to skill development among exporters (to be done in conjunction with sector work under pillar 2); • Strengthening of the Government’s capacity to formulate its trade development agenda through development of a research and planning capacity in MoC and trade-related Institutions associated with Trade SWAp; • Strengthening of the Government’s capacity to implement its trade development agenda through upgrading of skills in MoC and trade-related Institutions associated with Trade SWAp; • Strengthening of the Government’s capacity to manage its trade development agenda through capacity building in areas of project cycle management in MoC and trade-related Institutions associated with Trade SWAp

  17. Trade Related Capacity Development UNDP Strategic Plan • “Pursue a capacity development agenda across the 4 focus areas to propel and sustain national changes in human development as the single most importantUNDP service to programme countries”.

  18. Trade Related Assistance for Development and Equity (TRADE) The TRADE Project is owned and implemented by the Ministry of Commerce with UNDP’s support • Project background: The Integrated Framework (IF) for Trade Related Technical Assistance (TRTA); • Project Vision: Make Trade work for the Poor; • Overarching Goal: Support the development and implementation of pro-poor trade strategy; UNDP's assistance to MoC is focused on developing national capacity for developing, implementing and monitoring trade integration strategy; • Timeframe: 2006-2010

  19. Trade Related Assistance for Development and Equity (TRADE)

  20. Trade Related Assistance for Development and Equity (TRADE)

  21. Trade Related Assistance for Development and Equity (TRADE) • Institutional development capacity-Programme Management : • Key departments for immediate in-depth capacity assessment and development; • Target group for capacity development in “project management” and “management-by-objectives” skills; • Trade and Investment negotiation • Negotiation, FTAs as well as Investment treaties and contract • Technical expertise for Trade and Investment • Trade related expertise, SPS, Standard, IPR, Legal Reforms

  22. Thank youwww.undp.org/cambodia

More Related