The
rise of mega-regionals — such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)and the Regional
Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP)— suggests that the
world trade system is starting to appear more like a fragmented jigsaw puzzle
than a spaghetti bowl.
How
can we resolve this growing mess and buttress the global regime?
One approach
is to consolidate existing bilateral free trade agreements (FTAs) into regional
blocs, a process similar to solving a regional jigsaw puzzle, and then link
them up globally. That is, both regional and global jigsaw puzzles need to be
solved (and in that order) if this method is to work. But can it? The short
answer is no, while the longer answer starts with the challenges posed by
solving the regional jigsaw puzzle followed by the global one. But from these
answers we can consider an alternative way forward, which works.
RCEP illustrates the
regional puzzle. Like any jigsaw puzzle, we begin with disarray. But the RCEP
puzzle could be more than just messy — there is no solution because the pieces
of the puzzle, the ASEAN+1 and bilateral FTAs, do not fit together. The only
way to make them fit is to reshape them: either to shave them down or to build
them up. Shaving down the bits can be thought of as a ‘race to the bottom’, to
the lowest common denominator rules, making for an easier fit.
Building
them up is the opposite approach, where laggards lift their game to meet the
standards set by the front-runners. The only example of successful
consolidation like this is the EU. It will be a challenge to avoid RCEP
emerging only after a shave down, given the difficulties involved and the need
for political will to overcome them.
How would
‘success’ look if RCEP and the other mega-regionals were concluded as intended?
Not good, unfortunately. The regional mess would merely be replaced with a mess
at the global level with fragmentation of the global trading system into
discriminatory and competing trading blocs. To resolve the mess, how should the
process of global consolidation then occur? Should it proceed sequentially, or
through a single undertaking where the blocs come together to negotiate a
comprehensive deal?
A sequential
bloc-by-bloc approach, building on open accession clauses, faces the same
difficulties as regional consolidation, but would be amplified by greater
global diversity. Presumably there would have to be a dominant bloc that sets
the standard towards which other blocs would have to converge. If not, it will
only reduce the number of pieces in the global jigsaw puzzle, without providing
a solution. Assuming a trade war can be averted in the contest to dominate the
rule-setting game, it remains unclear whether the other blocs would be willing
to accept a process where conformity without compromise is demanded.
The problems
with the Doha Round has demonstrated that a single undertaking is probably
impractical when the agenda is a serious and wide-ranging one — and
substituting groupings of countries for individual states is unlikely to make a
significant difference. For this reason, cross-regional link-ups of mega blocs
have no precedent. Multiple tie-ups of mega blocs have never even been
attempted.
In this
environment, one way forward is to return to the most widely used modality of
trade liberalisation — unilateral action— but this time involving the
multilateralisation of preferences rather than unreciprocated reductions in
tariff rates. In Asia, ASEAN’s original members have done this with the ASEAN Free Trade Area, and
RCEP countries could follow suit since more than three-quarters of most
countries’ imports are already covered or soon to be covered
by an FTA.
There is
little point in holding out to negotiate reciprocity with the countries
accounting for the small amount of trade that remains uncovered. Also, the benefits from reciprocity fall short
of multilateralisation when preference utilisation is as low as it
is in Asia. The political economy suggests that the resistance from FTA
partners towards multilateralisation decreases as the number of FTAs increase,
due to preference erosion.
While
multilateralisation is easily applied to tariffs, it is also naturally suited
to non-tariff barriers (NTBs) and difficult sectors such as services. The
removal of many NTBs share public good characteristics. Unlike tariffs, it is
either costly or impractical to exclude non-members once an NTB has been
removed. Similarly, if services liberalisation is
pursued through harmonising standards or regulatory convergence, rather than
mutual recognition arrangements, non-members can easily accede later.
Multilateralisation
of preferences, whether tariff or non-tariff, presents a practical way out of
the current mega-mess. This is a
strategy that might recommend itself to negotiators who are charged with the
responsibility of delivering RCEP by 2015, or the TPP if it is to be concluded
anytime soon.
Jayant Menon
is Lead Economist at the Office of Regional Economic Integration, Asian Development Bank, and Adjunct Fellow
at the Arndt-Corden Department of Economics, The
Australian National University. The views expressed in this paper are those of
the author and do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the Asian
Development Bank, its Board of Governors or the governments they represent.
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