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Commentary > The China Post > Special

Trade, growth: Weep not for Doha


By Daniel Ikenson, Special to The China Post
Sunday, July 20, 2008


    

WASHINGTON -- The Doha Round of multilateral trade talks has already died a thousand deaths. But, ap

art from the bureaucracies in Geneva, Brussels and Washington, few are grieving.

That's because the world economy is moving forward without a World Trade Organization treaty. While Doha negotiations have sputtered on for seven years, annual global trade flows have increased 70 percent to US$14 trillion, real annual foreign direct investment is up 25 percent to US$1.5 trillion and the global economy has expanded by 30 percent to US$54.4 trillion, my research into official figures reveals. This compares with estimated benefits from full Doha Round success of US$287 billion a year.

These trends can continue, particularly if governments implement more domestic "trade facilitation" reforms.

Trade facilitation means streamlining the administrative and physical procedures involved in actually moving goods across borders -- the reforms that have already contributed handsomely to the increase in global trade, investment and output.

In fact, experience shows that trade facilitation alone could do even more to increase global trade flows than further reductions in tariff rates. For example, just a one-day reduction in the average time required to move both outbound and inbound U.S. cargo through customs and to fulfill all other administrative requirements could increase U.S. trade by almost US$29 billion per year.

If the time it takes for both imports and exports to fulfill customs and other administrative requirements in Taiwan could be reduced to world-best levels in Singapore, Taiwanese trade with the rest of the world would be expected to increase by US$39 billion annually.

While stroke-of-the-pen tariff reduction is indeed an important component of increased trade, those lower tariffs will not improve trade flows if bureaucratic customs procedures and shoddy logistics and communications are still in place.

In developing countries the average customs transaction involves 20 to 30 parties and requires 40 separate documents to complete, a 2004 U.N. study showed.

But good progress has been made on trade facilitation. In the past three years, 55 countries have implemented 68 reforms to streamline procedures. India introduced an on-line customs declaration system which allows clearance to begin before the ship docks and helped reduce delays for exporters and importers by seven days. Rwanda partially privatized its customs-bonded warehouses, which sparked construction of new warehouses and a 40 percent reduction in storage fees. Macedonia eliminated duplicate customs procedures, slashing waiting times by 75 percent. While these actions have encouraged investment and greater trade flows, there is still room for improvement.


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