Title: Border Regimes and Trade in Central Asia
1Border Regimes and Trade in Central Asia
- Saumya Mitra
- The World Bank
Brussels, March 2-3, 2009
2World Banks involvement
- Cross-border trade within the CAREC (2007)
completed - Trade Corridor Performance Measurement in Central
South Asia (2006 and 2007) - Bazaars and Trade Integration of CAREC countries
(June-October 2008) ongoing - Deepening integration in border regions within
- CAREC - ongoing
3Cross-border trade within the CAREC
- Background
- Ministers of CAREC countries recognize the
importance of border trade - At a meeting in Urumqi in October 2006, they
requested that the World Bank conduct a study on
border trade amongst the CAREC countries. - Key objectives
- To identify
- The scope and content of border trade actual
and potential - Its drivers
- The impediments it faces, such as physical,
i.e., infrastructure of border crossing points,
and non-physical barriers (e.g., customs
practices) - Major actors and
- Its impact on poverty reduction
- The World Banks response
- Project was designed in January-February 2007
- It was launched in April 2007 with the completion
of recruitment of national teams in Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. Uzbekistan refused
participating in it. - ? Surveys of selected border crossing points in
three countries above were conducted in May and
June 2007
4Cross-border trade within the CAREC
- Our work has shown that cross-border trade hinges
critically on - The ability of people to routinely cross the
border without paying a large unofficial payment - The ability of people to routinely cross the
border with goods without having to pay
prohibitive tariffs, or taxes or duties and
border charges - The ability of people to cross the border with
their own passenger vehicles or with light
vehicles from bordering regions.
5Cross-border trade within the CAREC
- Governments can intervene to facilitate
cross-border trade - First example
- The Afghan-Tajik cross-border project represents
the first stage towards wider and deeper
integration based on cross-region cooperation. In
2003, the Government of Tajikistan launched a
program designed to facilitate cross-border trade
with Afghanistan. The program has enabled the
opening of BCPs together with bazaars located
within Tajik territory (diagram below for their
layout). The facilitating aspects can be
summarized as follows - Bazaars opened at several BCPs between Tajikistan
and Afghanistan - No visas required from Afghan citizens to enter
the bazaar (they surrender ID or passport and
collect it when they leave the fenced bazaar) - Second example The Chinese-Kazakh Korgas BCP
- Cross-border trade benefits from two key
measures - Residents of the Kazakh Panfilov district can
enter China without any visa if they stay no
longer than one day. The waiving of the visa
requirement is important, as visas can be only
obtained in Almaty, about 300 kilometers from
Jarkent, and are expensive. - Some cargo brought into Kazakhstan from China is
duty-free. Cargo whose weight does not exceed 50
kilograms and value not exceed US1,000 can be
brought into Kazakhstan without paying any border
charges. - This set of preferential arrangements has
benefited the development of cross-border trade.
The Korgas bazaar, often described as a "showcase
of cross-border trade," has emerged as one of the
most important platforms supplying southwestern
parts of Kazakhstan.
6Cross-border trade within the CAREC
- But Government intervention can create obstacles
to Cross Border trade - Visa requirements
- The cost of a visa alone can erect an
insurmountable barrier to cross-border trade.
Visa requirements or even visa-free entry if
combined with large stamps (covering at times an
entire page) to mark each entry and exit in the
passport, constitute a barrier to engage in
trading activities. Applying and obtaining a
visa requires a trip to the capital or the
consulate city. - Vehicular restrictions
- Local people usually cannot drive their own
vehicles in other countries, are restricted to a
few kilometers into the territory of another
country, or are burdened with unreasonable
paperwork and high fees. - Opening hours for BCPs
- Hours of operation could be a significant
barrier.
7Cross-border trade within the CAREC (cont.)
- Closure of BCPs
- Several BCPs of Uzbekistan vis-à-vis Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan have been closed.
Examples are BCPs in Batken and Djalal Abad
oblasts. Evidence suggests that such closures
have had an adverse impact on local livelihoods.
- Exemptions
- Uzbekistan imposes much smaller limits on
exemptions from taxes and other border charges
than other central Asian Carec countries. This
clearly discourages cross-border trade. - Uncertainty in implementation of rules
- Cross-border traffic can be limited by
uncertainty associated with the implementation of
rules. Thus, the open border agreement between
Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan, which went into effect
on February 12, 2007, ceased to be implemented
from March 2007, thereby compelling Kyrgyz and
Uzbek nationals to obtain visas, but was
subsequently restored so that both nationals can
now travel visa-free and without stamps in
passports.
8Cross-border trade within the CAREC
- Closure of bazaars
- There are cases of bazaars located next to BCPs
being forcibly closed or being made to move
20-odd kilometers away from the border (e.g., the
one near Dostuk BCP in the Ferghana valley). - Infrastructure
- Among border posts sampled in the reports
survey, border-post infrastructure has not
appeared as a significant constraint to
cross-border trade. But rehabilitated
infrastructure will support border-trade only if
accompanied by facilitating procedures. - Role of regulations
- Transport arrangements may discriminate against
cross-border traders. Example of the Kulma pass
BCP. But regulations can also ease border
resident movements.
9- Wider public policy concerns
- Security is often cited as a factor for imposing
controls as is the discouragement of contraband
trade. But such government-imposed obstacles are
usually a blunt and expensive instrument to
attain such public policy aims. - Visa, security policies and the like are often
very difficult questions. The effectiveness of
government-imposed obstacles can be weak
(restrictions often are countered by smuggling or
unofficial payments). - The ultimate public policy aim of prosperity and
security is perhaps best achieved through a
combination of highly liberal cross-border
trading conditions accompanied by intelligent
policing and customs practices.
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13Trade Corridor Performance Measurement in Central
South Asia
- Key objectives
- Identify barriers to trade flows
- Develop recommendations on improvement of
infrastructure and procedures - Dialogue with the regional governments
- Establish baseline to measure project impact
road construction, customs modernizations, trade
facilitation and other projects - Benchmark against other trade corridors and
Regional TTF programs
14Trade and border issues as seen within Trade
Corridor Performance Measurement in Central
South Asia
- Central Asia has the potential to flourish as a
corridor for transit trade between Russia, China,
South Asia and Europe - Significant physical and non-physical barriers to
trade and transport, thereby increasing the
economic distance - Transit transport by road is primarily used for
connecting Central Asia with markets in Western
Europe, Turkey and the Russian Federation - In physical terms, the corridor through
Afghanistan and Pakistan offers the shortest
distance to the Indian Ocean! - Lack of cooperation between countries, is a major
issue.
15Instruments
- Five major instruments are being employed
- On-site physical measurements
- Truck driver interviews
- Survey of freight forwarders
- Survey of customs brokers
- Trip diaries
- Next step is of Corridor Performance Measurements
to South Asia (co-financed by USAID)
16Summary of observations
- Informal barriers are high in Central Asia
- Delays by other border agencies can be
significantly more than Customs - Elimination of delays needs careful assessment
- Measurements should be continued on a systemic
basis - Results should be disseminated in and outside the
region - Further support from Governments and
International organizations is needed
17Bazaars and Trade Integration of CAREC countries
- Key objectives
- Identification of the map of bazaar trading
activities in terms of sources of supply and
direction of flows hubs and spokes. - Estimate of the scope and composition foreign
trade flows intermediated by bazaars. - Estimate of welfare effects of bazaars
- Identification of policy implications and
developing recommendations
18Bazaars and Trade Integration of CAREC countries
- Significance of the foreign trade bazaar
transmission - channel
- Shuttle large-bazaar-destined trade takes place
in regional hubs with international reach and
local spokes. - It is the major source of supply for most
consumer products, with aggregate turnover
exceeding that of retail stores in most Central
Asian countries - It is also an important source of employment and
livelihood for large number of traders and
producers alike.
19Bazaars and Trade Integration of CAREC countries
- An examination of the bazaar channel and its
welfare effects - has important policy implication
- First, a good understanding of factors driving
this trade will shed light on weaknesses in
respective foreign trade regime (as it applies to
standard trade) or more broadly in business
climate. - Second, there are important lessons that can be
drawn from its use for necessary policy reforms
that would transform these flows into regular or
standard trade flows. - Third, an assessment of welfare impacts of these
flows may tip the balance against taking measures
designed to suppress this trade because of
alleged foregone customs and tax revenues. One
suspects that welfare gains in terms of
employment and poverty reduction may be much
higher than revenue losses
20Deepening integration in border regions within
CAREC
- What is Euroregio?
- Its underlying concept stems from the simple idea
that going a step further and deeper beyond the
existing framework of bilateral relations between
governments is beneficial to the welfare of
contiguous local communities, while paving way
for better relations between nations. - It is a framework for cooperation among regions
located across national borders - It dates back to the late 1950s when a fatal
episode close to the Dutch-German border in 1958
generated a push towards opening of the borders
between two bordering regions - Starting in the 1990s, the concept was adopted by
countries outside the EU as well, with the strong
support of both the European Commission and the
Council of Europe. - Model of Euroregio usually entails cross-border
cooperation - Covering various areas such as development,
environment, health and emergency assistance,
business and trade, tourism activities, as well
as culture and sport. - Addressing the movement of people, capital, goods
and services often going beyond rules negotiated
for the national economy. - In other issue-areas of relevance to contiguous
communities
21Examples of cross-border cooperation
- ENVIRONMENT and CULTURE
- Adriatic Euroregion
- Includes projects for protection of the cultural
heritage protection of the environment
Ecotourism, fishery and agriculture - Euroregion Baltic (energy and water forums, green
circle schools network of schools for education
and training in sustainable environmental
development
- BUSINESS, TRADE and TOURISM
- EureGo (Udine and Slovenia) local transport
and infrastructure, joint tourist festivals and
labor market activities) - Euroregio Karelia (Russia and Finland) - The
coordination of Interreg and Tacis programmes - Kaliningrad (Russia), Poland and Lithuania
wholesale food market, development fund for
Kaliningrad, aviation, transport
- HEALTH
- Emergency ambulances operation across border
(Belgium France) - Cooperation of mountain assistance
(France-Italy Briancon-Turin) - Nurse training (France-Spain Lavelanet-Mataro)
- Cross-border Network for the primary prevention
of drug addiction (Germany-Poland)
22Deepening integration in border regions within
CAREC
- Why is the experience with Euroregio worth
exploring? - It has laid foundation for sharing benefits of
more open borders also among countries not
parties to preferential regional arrangements - It has piloted various ideas of deeper
integration tested first at a micro-level - It has proven to be an effective instrument
complementing bottom-down integration - It has energized public support and set the
groundwork for closer cooperation at central
government level - Can Euroregio be transplanted?
- While no equivalent of Euroregio has as yet
emerged along the borders of contiguous CAREC
members, interactions already occurring and
potential benefits stemming from their expansion
make it an attractive concept to explore for
CAREC governments. - Various arrangements already exist between
bordering regions, formal and informal, that
would benefit from stability assured by the
status of Asiaregio e.g. Kulundu on TJK-KRG
border and Korgaz on KAZ-CHN border below)
23Deepening integration in border regions within
CAREC
- Key objectives
- To adopt the concept to CAREC conditions and
assess its potential benefits - To identify contiguous regions that might benefit
from institutionalized forms of closer
cooperation - To activate a bottom-up dimension of CAREC-led
regional integration effort. - To develop ideas for the areas to be included as
Asiaregio-type cross-border cooperation