Asean can beat China on value chain offers

June 12, 2015, 3:31 pm | Admin

Economically-integrated Asean can replace China in providing multi-national companies (MNCs) a total value chain for their business, according to TMF Group’s new paper paper entitled The AseanCommunity: Capturing the zeitgeist of rising Asia”.

Yet, that would be achieved if all non-tariff barriers are removed, it said.

On the plus side, the formation of the Asean Economic Community, due to complete on December 31, 2015, means the integration of the diverse range of industrial specialisations in Asean which would make the region suitable for a wide array of investors.

The paper notes that Singapore and Malaysia specialise in electronic products, Thailand is the leading manufacturer of fast moving consumer goods and processed foods, while Vietnam and Cambodia focus on garments. Indonesia, Brunei, and the Philippines are the main producers and exporters of natural resources such as palm oil, rubber, sugar cane, rice, cocoa, timber, petroleum, natural gas, coal and tin.

“The vertical and horizontal integration of Southeast Asia economies under the AEC would stimulate intra-regional investment, trade and business connections benefitting both foreign and local firms,” said Paolo Tavolato, TMF Group’s head of Asia Pacific.

“As China’s population ages and the workforce becomes more expensive, ASEAN can offer the full value chain to multi-national companies, from, say, research and development in Singapore, to labour-intensive manufacturing in Indonesia and Vietnam, supported by Business process outsourcing in the Philippines,” he added.

Nevertheless, TMF Group did highlight that a crucial step to this new era for the region would be the removal of non-tariff barriers. According to the Chairman’s statement at the 26th Asean Summit in April 2015, 458 out of the total 506 high-priority measures outlined in the AEC roadmap have been fully implemented across all Asean countries. This took the AEC’s implementation to 90.5 per cent. For the remaining deliverables, the Asean Economic Ministers (AEM) have been tasked to identify, prioritise and implement measures that carry the highest economic impact in a bid to achieve 95 per cent implementation rate by year-end.

“Among the remaining deliverables, the removal of non-tariff barriers (NTBs) is the hardest to implement as most are populist measures designed to protect strategic national industries,” said Tavolato. “Challenges remain in the elimination of NTBs such as a single channel for imports, price control measures, natural resource subsidies, and preferential treatment of state-owned enterprises. Although the withdrawal of NTBs might inflict short-term pain it would eventually be beneficial as competition will push these industries to move up the value chain and increase productivity.”

A study by Institute of Southeast Asian (Plummer and Chia, 2009) shows that the total removal of tariff and NTBs in Asean could reduce the cost of doing business in the region by 5 per cent and increase its GDP by 5 per cent.

According to the Asian Economic Journal (2012), the establishment of the AEC could generate US$280 billion to US$615 billion (equivalent to 5 per cent to 12 per cent of projected Asean GDP) in annual economic value by 2030. It is predicted that by 2025, more than half of the world’s consumers would live within a five to six hour flight from Asean.

“Every step towards creating the AEC tests the commitment and political will of the leaders to sacrifice their national agenda for the common good. Investors are drawn to Asean countries as they hope to leverage the region’s emerging consumer market, rising middle classes and equally increasing spending power. All of this makes Asean one of the most important consumer markets of the future, and helps pave the way for an Asean Economic Community to emerge as a powerhouse of the world economy,” Tavolato concluded.

Last modified on February 1, 2017, 3:31 pm | 2640