Title: Productive Integration in ASEAN: Thailand Perspective
1Productive Integration in ASEAN Thailand
Perspective
- Lessons from Asia and Europe for MERCOSUR
2Organization
- Introduction
- Trade integration
- Thailand Historical development of productive
integration - Case studies Automotive
- Conclusion and policy implications
3Significance of Intra-industry trade
- Growing of international trade among developing
countries (South-South trade) - East Asia experience in regional integration
- Freer trade ? economic growth ? reduces poverty
(Bhagwati 2004) - Industrialization requires government
intervention - Market-led (neo-liberal approach)
- Government-led (Keynesian approach)
- Policy frameworks designed to direct scarce
resource to expand productive capacity and
upgrade industrial sector. - FDI and MNEs can facilitate industrialization and
productive integration
4Objectives
- Draw some policy implications from Thailand
industrialization and productive integration
experience - Examine intra-regional trade between Thailand and
ASEAN - Data UN Comtrade Database
- 3 periods 1996, 2002, 2007
- manufacturing products (SITC 78)
- Automotive and components (selected 3-digit from
SITC 78)
5Exports and Imports of manufacturing product
products (SITC 78)
6Intra-regional Trade(SITC 78)
7Factors behind trade and FDI integration in East
Asian economies
- More outward-oriented liberalization policy, in
trade and investment (GATT/WTO) - Global MNEs have formed their production networks
in this region - Location remains a crucial factor and firms have
to decide the optimal place for efficient
coordination - Advancement in ICT (reduce service link costs)
- Rapid growth of emerging market economies has
brought Asia to become the factory of the world
8Why Thailand?
- Thailand
- is a developing country, short experience in
industrialization, and had virtually no
manufacturing background. - becomes a part of global production network of
some key products, such as automobile and
electronic device. - relied very much on FDI to upgrade local
supporting industries. - is one of the leading countries that established
Association of South East Asian Nation (ASEAN) in
1967 - recently, concluded several FTAs with other
countries as bilateral basis and regional basis,
such as ASEAN3, ASEAN6 - evolution of Thailands trade policy and
industrial development resulted in productive
integration with East Asia
9GDP share
Thailands Structural Changes
Export share
10Economic and Manufacturing Growth, GDP per Capita
11Structure of Manufacturing FDI
12Importance of FDI in Capital Formation
13Main Export Sectors
14Thailands Inflation rate
15Movement of Exchange rate index (per 1 USD)
16Thailand Trade and Industrial Policies
- Import substitution strategy (1960-1980s)
- Export oriented (1980s onwards)
- Committed to liberalize the economy trade and
financial liberalization (1990s) - Thailand began to negotiate FTAs with many
countries in order to improve competitive
advantage - Private (stakeholders) and public sectors were
active in the negotiation process of FTA
17Summary of Thailands policies
18Reasons for regional integration of Thailands
Automotive Industry
- Government Policies
- Local content requirement (LCR) regulation
- Industrial Estate (from 1972)
- BOI promotion scheme
- Infrastructure development, e.g., Eastern
Seaboard Development Project - Government budget
- Japanese ODAs
- World Bank Loan
- Sound macroeconomics policies (outward-oriented
policies, and trade liberalization) - Commitment to liberalization abolishment of LCR
- Large market (pickup trucks)
- Economic crisis aftermath
19Automotive Clusters in Thailand
20Process of Global Supply Chain Integration
- Integration in Thailand (agglomeration) since
1980s - Integration with ASEAN 3 (vehicles and parts)
(late 1990s onwards) - Final products for the rest of the world (2000
onwards)
21Production and International Trade Network in
Southeast Asia
22Toyotas Production and Supply Network An
example of product fragmentation
23Surplus in vehicle trade
24Deficit in component trade
25Lessons from Thailand
- The integration process was induced by the
rationalized industrial policy in 1980s - Roles of technocrats in designing industrial
policies (strategic, feasible, fair,
nondiscrimination) - FDI and MNEs are important players in the process
- Roles of institutions and public-private
cooperation committee (PPCC) in 1980s - Macroeconomics stability
- Infrastructure and regional development Road
network, Seaport (Japanese ODA was important),
and HRD
26Lessons from Thailand
- Investment incentive to promote regional
development and human resource development - Problems in the development process
- Only large business firms or associations could
lobby the government in the negotiation process
of FTAs or EPAs - Small firms tend to face difficulty in improving
their competitiveness - Supports should be provided to the group that
received adverse effect from the FTA and
globalization
27Conclusion and Implications
- Trade integration in manufacturing expanded
rapidly in the past decade. - Regional integration among East Asian countries
has been enhanced due to - industrial collaboration (intra-industry trade)
- the proliferation of free trade agreements
(FTAs). - Implications from Thailand experience
- early stage policy-led approach
- promote key industries, stabilize economic
condition, develop infrastructure - rely mainly on FDI to develop local supporting
industries - gradually liberalize and turn to supportive policy
28Thank you