ASIA-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP CREATES NEW ‘CENTRE OF GRAVITY’ FOR GLOBAL TRADE

A new free trade agreement, covering a third of the world economy, will eliminate 90% of tariffs among 15 East Asian and Pacific countries and is expected to boost intraregional exports by US$42 billion.

 

The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) said in a new study that the new Asia-Pacific free trade agreement — set to enter into force on January 1, 2022 — will create the world’s largest trading bloc by economic size.

 

The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) includes 15 East Asian and Pacific nations of different economic sizes and stages of development: Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, New Zealand, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Viet Nam.

 

UNCTAD said the RCEP will become the largest trade agreement in the world as measured by the GDP of its members  almost of one third of the world’s GDP.

 

By comparison, other major regional trade agreements by share of global GDP are the South American trade bloc Mercosur (2.4%), Africa’s continental free trade area (2.9%), the European Union (17.9%) and the United States-Mexico-Canada agreement (28%).

 

UNCTAD’s analysis shows that the RCEP’s impact on international trade will be significant. "The economic size of the emerging bloc and its trade dynamism will make it a centre of gravity for global trade," the report said.

 

Amid COVID-19, the entry into force of the RCEP can also promote trade resilience. UNCTAD said based on its research, trade within such agreements has been "relatively more resilient against the pandemic-induced global trade downturn."

 

Eliminating 90% of tariffs within bloc

UNCTAD noted that the agreement encompasses several areas of cooperation, with tariff concessions a central principle. It said that this will eliminate 90% of tariffs within the bloc, and these concessions are key in understanding the initial impacts of the RCEP on trade, both inside and outside the bloc.

"Under the RCEP framework, trade liberalization will be achieved through gradual tariff reductions. While many tariffs will be abolished immediately, others will be reduced gradually during a 20-year period," the report said.

Meanwhile, the tariffs that remain in force will be mainly limited to specific products in strategic sectors, such as agriculture and the automotive industry, in which many of the RCEP members have opted out from trade liberalization commitments.

 

Boon for intraregional exports

 

The report said trade between the bloc’s 15 economies was already worth about US$2.3 trillion in 2019, and UNCTAD’s analysis shows the agreement's tariff concessions could further boost exports within the newly formed alliance by nearly 2%, or approximately US$42 billion.

 

This would result from trade creation – as lower tariffs would stimulate trade between members by nearly US$17 billion – and trade diversion – as lower tariffs within the RCEP would redirect trade valued at nearly US$25 billion away from non-members to members.

 

Nonetheless, UNCTAD said the RCEP members are expected to benefit to varying extents from the agreement.

 

"Tariff concessions are expected to produce higher trade effects for the largest economies of the bloc, not because of negotiations asymmetries, but largely due to the already low tariffs between many of the other RCEP members," it said, noting that Japan would benefit the most from RCEP tariff concessions, largely because of trade diversion effects.

 

The country’s exports are expected to rise by about US$20 billion, an increase equivalent to about 5.5% relative to its exports to RCEP members in 2019.

 

The report also finds substantial positive effects for the exports of most other economies, including Australia, China, the Republic of Korea and New Zealand.

 

On the other hand, calculations show RCEP tariff concessions may end up lowering exports for Cambodia, Indonesia, the Philippines and Viet Nam.

 

"This would stem primarily from the negative trade diversion effects, the report says, as some exports of these economies are expected to be diverted to the advantage of other RCEP members because of differences in the magnitude of tariff concessions," UNCTAD said.

 

But it’s better to be in than out

The report notes, however, that the overall negative effects for some of the RCEP members don’t imply that they would have been better off by remaining outside of the RCEP agreement. 

"Even without considering the other benefits of the RCEP agreement besides tariff concessions, the trade creation effects associated with participation in RCEP softens the negative trade diversion effects," it said.

 

Overall, the report finds that the entire region will benefit from RCEP’s tariff concessions, with most of these gains resulting from trade diverted away from non-members.

"As the process of integration of RCEP members goes further, these diversion effects could be magnified, a factor that should not be underestimated by non-RCEP members," the report said.