UNESCAP treaty on digital trade
UNESCAP treaty on digital trade
The Philippines acceded to the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP) Framework Agreement on Facilitation of Cross-border Paperless Trade in Asia and the Pacific on December 23 in New York, making it the first ASEAN member-country to do so.

The Philippines has acceded to a UN treaty that aims to accelerate cross-border digital trade in the Asia-Pacific region, making it the first Southeast Asian nation to accede to the agreement.

The Philippines acceded to the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP) Framework Agreement on Facilitation of Cross-border Paperless Trade in Asia and the Pacific on December 23 in New York. This makes the Philippines the first Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) member country to accede to the treaty.

The framework agreement, a UN treaty deposited with the secretary general of the UN in New York, is aimed at accelerating the implementation of digital trade facilitation measures for trade and development. Designed as an inclusive instrument accessible to countries at all levels of development to develop their capacity to engage in cross-border paperless trade, the final treaty text was adopted by UNESCAP in May 2016.

It is expected to provide countries of Asia and the Pacific with a new tool and “digital” complement to better implement the World Trade Organization (WTO) Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) and the development of cross-border e-commerce.

Trade cost reductions expected from full implementation of cross-border paperless trade are estimated at 10% to 30% of existing transactions costs, depending on the current state of paperless trade development in the participating countries. Significant benefits in terms of trade compliance are also expected.

Based on the UNESCAP report titled “Digital and Sustainable Trade Facilitation in ASEAN,” implementation of cross-border paperless trade, together with the WTO TFA, is expected to help the Philippines cut trade costs by at least 10%, boosting its competitiveness. Trade cost savings could increase further should Philippines trade partners also join in the initiative.

Other benefits of the framework agreement include ready access to potential counterpart countries for negotiation on cross-border data exchange, thus avoiding numerous bilateral approaches and reducing the work involved in preparing bilateral or subregional arrangements and improving paperless trade readiness at national level.

It also provides the opportunity to make national paperless trade practices interoperable and become better prepared to engage in cross-border trade data exchange, in particular through structured and regular sharing of lessons.

Another benefit is direct participation in developing pragmatic solutions for the cross-border exchange of trade documents, which can increase the possibility of becoming early adopter/implementer, and thus, would potentially boost trade competitiveness.

The framework agreement can also reduce overall investment costs and trade transaction time, while improving levels of compliance by traders to regulatory requirements in international trade.

Other countries that have formally signed the framework agreement include Armenia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, and Iran, which all acceded in 2017, while Azerbaijan acceded in March 2018. The framework agreement is open to the 53 member states in Asia and the Pacific region. – Roumina Pablo

You May Also Like

BIR, BOC reforms to offset P174B revenue loss from tax cuts

The Philippine Department of Finance (DOF) plans to institute reforms at its two attached revenue-generating agencies to compensate for the expected lower revenues from…

Manila grants trucks 10am-3pm window to ply city streets

The City of Manila is to grant truckers a window of 10am to 3pm to ply their routes, modifying an earlier announced total daytime…

PH manufacturing logs modest hike in July on strong domestic demand

The Philippines’ manufacturing activity index increased to 52.1 in July 2019 from 51.3 in June, signaling a moderate improvement in the health of the…

Manila North Harbor manifest requirement disrupting domestic lines’ operations

DOMESTIC shipping lines in the Philippines are starting to feel the onus of a Bureau of Customs (BOC) ruling requiring submission of copies of…