Title: Assessing the EUCaribbean EPA process
1Assessing the EU-Caribbean EPA process
- Michael Gasiorek
- Michanne Haynes-Prempeh
- Tomasz Iwanov
- Gonzalo Varela
- Jedrzej Chwiejczak
-
-
-
- We gratefully acknowledge funding for this
research which was provided by the UK Department
for International Development (DFID).
2Overview of presentation
- Outline main features of the EPA process
- Application of the Sussex Framework
- Implications for an EPA
3Checklist covered by the Sussex Framework
4Background to the EPAs
- Under the Cotonou Agreement the EU and ACP
countries are committed to negotiating Economic
Partnership Agreements to come into force by
2008. - The objective of these EPAs is to facilitate the
integration of the ACP countries into the world
economy. Specifically, by
- fostering and supporting greater regional
integration,
- allowing a flexible liberalisation of trade in
goods and services,
- building up institutional capacities and
- the establishment of simple and transparent rules
for business,
- development assistance provisions.
- 6 thematic areas
- market access
- agriculture and fisheries
- trade in services
- other trade related issues
- development cooperation
- other / legal issues
5Caribbean trading relations
- three principal axis
- With the EU
- Note the EPA is being negotiated with CARICOM
DR
- With the US Caribbean Basin Initiative
- Within the region
- CARIFTA ? Caricom (1973) ? Caribbean Single
Market and Economy (CSME) Customs Union ?
common market.
- Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States
- however note various derogations and exceptions
largely based on the distinction between MDCs and
LDCs
- other bilateral accords/FTAs Canada, Costa
Rica...
- Caricom Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada,
Montserrat, St Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, St
Vincent and the Grenadines, Bahamas, Barbados,
Belize, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, Suriname, and
Trinidad and Tobago. - Anguilla, British Virgin Islands, Bermuda,
Cayman Islands, Turks Caicos associate
members
- Countries in italics Organisation of Eastern
Caribbean States (OECS)
- Countries in bold MDCs
6Using descriptive statistics...
- Looking at existing levels of protection - eg.
tariffs
- Looking at the existing pattern of trade
- Shares of trade by partner, and by product -
though use of aggregates may mask sectoral level
effects and differences
- Use of detailed product level analysis
- Finger-Kreinin indices of import similarity
- indices of revealed comparative advantage
- decile analysis
- Other issues
- identifying key industries
- degree of export / import concentration ?
implications for structural change and the
political economy of the process
- Looking at changes over time to what extent are
key change already taking place, and to what
extent are the changes implied by the proposed
RTA consistent with these changes
7Some comparative statistics (2001)
8Trade barriers
- simple average CARICOM tariff has fallen from
17.6 in 1991 to 12.25 in 2002
- In 2002 the agricultural and beverages and
tobacco sectors remained most protected with
average tariffs of 19.55 and 37.7 respectively.
Crude materials and mineral fuels had an average
tariff of just above 5, while the tariffs on
manufactured goods and machinery were around 9.
- However, derogations from the CET are allowed in
certain cases and for certain countres -
importance of the distinction between MDCs and
LDCs - large number of tariff peaks - over 1000 in 2001
- There is also the issue of barriers to
intra-CARICOM trade - both tariff and
non-tariff barriers.
- note also importance of tariff revenue for many
Caribbean countries
9Share of imports by source (2001)
10Share of exports by source (2001)
11(No Transcript)
12(No Transcript)
13(No Transcript)
14Degree of export concentration
- concentrated nature of exports / production also
reflected in small number of industries with
indices of revealed comparative advantage 1
- Relative stability of structures of production
/ trade also reflected in stability of the RCAs
over time, and in an examination of changing
trade flows over time using decile analysis.
15Similarity in export bundles by destination
- Finger-Kreinin indices for 2002, except St Kitts
and the Dominican Republic for 2001
16Similarity in export bundles by country
- Finger-Kreinin indices for 2002
17Summary
- overall export performance mixed
- some evidence that Caribbean regional integration
has helped to promote intra-regional trade flows
for both OECS and non-OECS economies (based on
gravity modelling) - highly concentrated export structures, and
generally remaining fairly constant over time
with some exceptions (eg. Trinidad Tobago,
St.Kitts...) - little overlap in exports either by destination
or by country
- on the one hand this suggests that there may be
lack of competition in Caribbean trade and
production structures which could facilitate
integration - on the other hand may cause difficulties when it
comes to agreement on issues such as
substantially all trade.
- Pattern of trade with the EU and other countries
suggests that there may be considerable scope for
trade diversion arising from an EPA.
18Further issues 1 - Substantially all trade
- how is this to be defined by value of trade, by
no. of tariff lines...?
- given the above, what percentage figure will be
agreed upon -
- a figure of 90 seems to be commonly accepted
- given the above, will the reductions necessarily
be symmetrical
- unlikely cf. EU - South Africa
- will there be a common set of tariff lines agreed
upon
- how easy will it be to agree on such a common set
of tariff lines?
- given the difference in export and import
structures may be difficult
- an examination of the degree of overlap on the
basis of various criteria (tariff levels, tariff
revenue generated, import shares...) indicates
that no industry is common to all countries! - given the above in part arising from the
in-build distinction in the region between the
MDC and the LDC there is strong pressure on the
Caribbean side for special and differential
treatment. EU not keen!!
19Further issues 2 - Special differential
treatment
- Typically justified by reference to a lack of
resources / structure to engage in the
integrated economy
- lack of human or physical infrastructure
- weakness of institutions legal, regulatory,
fiscal, banking...
- size and location
- Modes of implementation
- better access to markets of trading partners
- more restrictions on access to domestic markets
- flexibility in implementation of agreements eg.
with respect to timing, or coverage of goods
- temporary v permanent (derogations)
- via development assistance as opposed to via
differentiation in the process of trade
liberalisation
20- Successful SDT needs to be able to distinguish
between countries in recognition of their
different needs - other wise it is likely to be a
blunt instrument that arbitrarily includes /
excludes countries. - In the Caribbean context SDT is complicated by
two factors
- the presence of a long-drawn distinction between
LDCs and MDCs which may or may not do that
distinguishing very well.
- The relationship between the EPA process and the
CSME
- the objective of the CSME is to greatly
strengthen and deepen the regional integration
process
- Introducing (further) SDT within the group in
terms of the EPAs only serves to complicate this
process and make it more difficult - introduces
bureaucratic complexity introduces distortions - Therefore it is important to be clear about
- the grounds for SDT - infrastructure,
institutions, size/location?
- the importance of SDT being temporary / time
delimited
- minimising distortions ?having different lists
is not obvious. This introduces distortions in
relative prices across markets. Better to have a
common list, but possibly with different
time-scales - Note also importance of development assistance as
a form of SDT - however this sort of linkage
being resisted by the EU
21(No Transcript)
22Implications for a possible EPA
- asymmetric shallow integration with the EU likely
to lead to net trade diversion an associated
substantial loss of tariff revenue
- multilateral liberalisation likely to lead to
substantially higher welfare gains - though also
larger adjustment costs
- combination of liberalisation ongoing changes
to banana sugar regimes, ongoing preference
erosion likely to result in significant
structural changes. - important in terms of addressing the
development needs of the region in considering
the degree of political support for the EPA.
- However, integration and negotiations on further
integration complicated by the distinction
between MDCs and LDCs, and by the inclusion of
the DR in the EPA negotiations - hence eg. agreement on substantially all trade
and on SDT likely to be harder to achieve.
- An EPA could be an important stepping-stone to
the greater integration of the Caribbean into the
world economy where any shallow integration is
part of a broader package involving eg elements
of deep integration, the appropriate
liberalisation of services, appropriate levels of
adjustment and assistance aid, and progress on
mulilateral trade liberalisation... - ... but that will depend on that broader package.