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ASEAN-CER Integration Partnership Forum

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Title: ASEAN-CER Integration Partnership Forum


1
ASEAN-CERIntegration Partnership Forum
  • Kuala Lumpur
  • Saturday 25 June 2011

2
Overview of Economic Integration Between
Australia and New ZealandWhat HappenedHow it
Happened
  • Presentation for
  • Integration Partnership Forum
  • Kuala Lumpur, 25 June 2011
  • Robert Scollay
  • APEC Study Centre
  • University of Auckland

3
Australia-New Zealand Economic Integration
  • A Success Story
  • But
  • Success did not come easily
  • especially in the early years
  • Always more to be done
  • Focus first on manufactures, agriculture and
    services followed
  • Free movement of labour
  • a given throughout the process
  • ? one of the cornerstones of ANZ economic
    integration

4
(No Transcript)
5
Summary Three Make-or-Break Moments
  • Establishment of ANZCERTA 1983
  • framework for a comprehensive FTA
  • initial caution, timidity
  • early implementation encountered many
    difficulties
  • 1988 Review of ANZCERTA
  • breakthrough to a comprehensive FTA
  • beginning of path toward a single market
  • Statement of intent on Single Economic Market
    2009
  • confirmation of single market as the ultimate goal

6
Before ANZCERTA
  • ..there was
  • the original NAFTA (NZ-Australia FTA)
  • Positive list
  • Limited coverage
  • Increasingly difficult to extend
  • Reached end of useful life by early 1980s

7
First Make-or-Break Moment Establishment of
ANZCERTA 1983
  • Negative list agreement for free trade in goods
  • Furiously opposed by manufacturers
  • (Free Trade with Australia A Step Too
    Far)
  • Very cautious initially
  • extensive negative list, special arrangements for
    agricultural products
  • lengthy phase-out periods for tariffs and NZs
    QRs
  • investment deliberately excluded, no coverage of
    services
  • Initial implementation difficult with some
    bickering
  • but meantime
  • both countries began embracing comprehensive
    economic reform, including unilateral MFN tariff
    reduction programmes
  • business gradually became more enthusiastic
  • (CER The Way Ahead)

8
Second Make-or-Break Moment1988 Review of
ANZCERTA
  • End of the FTA Phase
  • acceleration of free trade in goods
  • extension to free trade in services on negative
    list basis
  • Beginning of the Single Market Phase
  • elimination of anti-dumping on trans-Tasman trade
  • commitment on working to harmonise customs and
    quarantine procedures
  • initial agreement on government procurement

9
Gradual Accumulation of Building Blocks for the
Single Market
  • 1990s
  • agreement on standards, accreditation, quality
    assurance
  • joint accreditation system for conformity
    assessment (JASANZ)
  • joint food standards and food standards authority
  • mutual recognition of standards and occupational
    qualifications (TTMRA)
  • enhanced arrangements on government procurement
  • double tax agreement
  • work on business law harmonisation
  • flow-on issues related to people movement
    addressed (eligibility for welfare benefits,
    state-funded medical treatment, pensions cost
    implications for each government)
  • services
  • most remaining sectors progressively removed from
    the negative list
  • implementation issues addressed in some sectors
  • Early mid-2000s
  • single market concept placed on the agenda
  • focus on business law, competition and securities
    regulation issues
  • progress relatively slow
  • ANZ Leadership Forum began meeting 2004
  • focusing support of business leaders in both
    countries

10
Third Make-or-Break MomentCommitment to a
Single Economic Market
  • Joint Statement of Intent on SEM 2009
  • strong focus in initial work programme on
    competition and regulatory issues (including
    enforcement), also IP
  • some elements completed, others nearing
    completion
  • other important issues remain to be resolved
  • Major recent developments
  • adoption of new rules of origin 2009 (switch from
    RVC to CTC)
  • Treaty on Court Proceedings and Regulatory
    Enforcement 2009
  • Investment Protocol 2011
  • beginning to fill a major gap in integration
    arrangements
  • progress on investment previously held back by
    various concerns over
  • precedent setting
  • relation to broader investment policies
  • erosion of tax bases via application of dividend
    imputation provisions in both countries

11
How It HappenedFeatures of the Australia-NZ
Integration Process
  • Leadership and Process
  • Political leadership at highest level (PMs) was
    crucial at make-or-break moments
  • Maintaining momentum through ups and downs
    facilitated by
  • close working relations at official level across
    many government functions
  • periodic setting of broad objectives to be
    pursued through well-defined processes
  • Objectives specified in broad terms rather than
    as detailed blueprints
  • often outcome focused

12
ASEAN CER Integrated Partnership
ForumEvolution of CER to SEMGeoff
MillerPrincipal Adviser, Markets Group,
Department of the Treasury, Australia
13
Single Economic Market
  • a geographic area comprising two or more
    countries in which there is no significant
    discrimination in the markets of each country
    arising from differences in the policies and
    regulations adopted by each country

14
Scope of the SEM
  • Business law (cross-border insolvency, company
    registration, mutual recognition of securities
    offerings)
  • Prudential regulation (seamless banking,
    insurance, banking crisis and failure
    management)
  • Superannuation (portability, interaction between
    the retirement income systems)
  • Taxation (double tax agreements)

15
SEM Institutional Arrangements
  • the participation of New Zealand Ministers and
    officials in relevant Australian Ministerial
    Councils
  • the Trans-Tasman Working Group on Court
    Proceedings and Regulatory Enforcement (2003)
  • the Trans-Tasman Auditing and Accounting
    Standards Advisory Group (2004)
  • the annual Australia New Zealand Leadership Forum
    (2004)
  • the Joint Trans-Tasman Council on Banking
    Supervision (2005)
  • the Mutual Recognition of Securities Offerings
    Treaty (2006)
  • the MoU on the Coordination of Business Law
    (2000, revised in 2006 and 2010) and
  • the Trans Tasman Outcomes Implementation Group
    (2009).

16
Memorandum of Understanding
  • SEM is governed by the Memorandum of
    Understanding between the Government of New
    Zealand and the Government of Australia on the
    Coordination of Business Law
  • The MOU sets out a framework of principles and a
    range of shared practical outcomes for developing
    cross border economic initiatives.

17
Memorandum of Understanding
  • Original MOU signed in 1988 as the MOU on
    Business Law Harmonisation
  • In 2000 old MOU replaced by a MOU on the
    Coordination of Business Law
  • MOU on the Coordination of Business Law was
    revised and resigned in 2006 and 2010.

18
Vision of a single economic market
  • No focus or sense of unity in purpose
  • Harder to achieve legislative harmony
  • Seemingly intractable issues around differing
    legal systems or sovereignty issues
  • Time for a new approach

19
A new approach to the SEM
  • Not identical laws but shared outcomes
  • Shared outcomes could be achieved in any way each
    country felt necessary or appropriate
  • In August 2009, a Joint Statement of Intent
    Single Economic Market Outcomes Framework
    together with a framework of principles and
    outcomes proposals

20
A framework of principles
  • persons in Australia or New Zealand should not
    have to engage in the same process or provide the
    same information twice
  • measures should deliver substantively the same
    regulatory outcomes in both countries in the most
    efficient manner
  • regulated occupations should be able to operate
    seamlessly between each country
  • both Governments should seek to achieve economies
    of scale and scope in regulatory design and
    implementation
  • products and services supplied in one
    jurisdiction should be able to be supplied in the
    other
  • the two countries should seek to strengthen joint
    capability to influence international policy
    design
  • outcomes should seek to optimise net Trans-Tasman
    benefit.

21
The work program
  • Insolvency law
  • Financial reporting policy
  • Financial services policy
  • Competition policy
  • Business reporting
  • Corporations law
  • Personal property securities law
  • Intellectual property law
  • Consumer policy

22
Trans-Tasman Outcomes Implementation Group
  • Ensure that the necessary processes are in place
    to advance the work
  • Monitor progress towards meeting the agreed
    outcomes
  • Identify areas of risk and seek to resolve
    issues
  • Report regularly to both Governments on progress
    in achieving the outcomes and
  • Make appropriate recommendations in relation to
    any changes to the initial list of proposed
    outcomes.

23
TTOIG website
  • www.treasury.gov.au/ttoig/

24
Case study Cross-border insolvency
  • Australia adopted the United Nations Committee on
    International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) Model Law on
    Cross-Border Insolvency (Model Law) by passage of
    the Cross-Border Insolvency Act 2008
  • New Zealand adopted the Model Law by its earlier
    legislation, the Insolvency (Cross-border) Act
    2006

25
Case study Cross-border insolvency
  • Although the Model Law provides an extremely
    flexible generic framework for governing
    cross-border insolvencies between countries with
    greatly differing legal systems, that flexibility
    can come at the cost of efficiency
  • The pure legislative approach to harmonisation
    through model laws or strict alignment of laws
    did not lead to the expected harmonisation of
    regulation

26
Conclusion
  • Aligning legislation in many cases would not and,
    in the case of Australia and New Zealand, did not
    result in regulatory harmonisation
  • Harmonisation can occur when each country commits
    itself to achieving a shared outcome
  • The mechanism for delivering that outcome is a
    means to an end, and not the outcome itself

27
A Business Perspective on Cross Border Agreements
  • Reflecting the Australia New Zealand CER/SEM
    Experience
  • Kerry McDonald

28
Context for negotiations
  • Business is the engine of an economy.
  • It operates within the framework of government
    laws, policies and international agreements.
  • This framework has a critical influence on the
    competitiveness and performance of business and
    strength of the economy.

29
  • Business is now, of necessity, much more mobile,
    shifting investment readily in response to the
    competitiveness of different locations.
  • Success in the intensively competitive globalized
    economy requires this.
  • So, it is important, in terms of outcomes, that
    governments engage with business to understand
    its needs when developing the policy framework,
    including cross border agreements.

30
Related business perspectives
  • As a businessman, when you understand what is
    possible you become impatient with anything less.
  • In the modern World the speed of decision making
    has accelerated dramatically. A 90 to 180 day
    decision horizon often replaces one previously
    defined in years.
  • It is often a struggle for policy makers to
    appreciate this.

31
The Evolution of the A-NZ Process
  • The attitudes and role of business varied
    markedly through the process, with important
    implications for the rate of progress and the
    level of business support or frustration.
  • 50 years ago, pre-globalisation the CER
    initiative was largely political, with some
    business support.
  • Business generally was less outward looking, more
    reliant on subsidies and protection, and cautious.

32
  • Over time both economies became more focused on
    reducing subsidies and increasing competition and
    competitiveness.
  • In parallel, business became more engaged with
    and supportive of the CER process - but initially
    to maximize the gain for its home-base economy
    and minimize and loss of protection or other
    adverse impacts.

33
  • Then, over the last 2 decades, with increasing
    globalisation and the rapid growth of Emerging
    Economies, the A-NZ business view shifted
    strongly, reflecting greater exposure to and
    awareness of international competition, its
    challenges and opportunities.

34
  • It became a much more aligned, single view,
    across both economies, on steps needed to improve
    the competitiveness of both economies, in the
    face of globalisation we are in this
    together!
  • And, business became much more engaged and active
    with the CER/SEM processes, and increasingly
    impatient with slow-moving political leadership.

35
  • The powerful unifying force was the competitive
    pressures in the market on both economies.
  • It also sharpened the business focus on the
    domestic competitiveness benefits of leveraging
    off the CER/SEM change process to improve
    domestic policies and align them cross border.

36
  • The CER/SEM processes became a vehicle for
    addressing domestic policy inefficiencies and
    barriers to competitiveness.
  • The dominant business view became we want the
    best, most efficient policy, whether its from
    Australia or NZ or elsewhere.

37
  • NZ business was apprehensive of As greater size,
    but increasingly focussed on the necessity and
    benefits of closer engagement with the larger
    economy.
  • Some, mainly regulated, domestically focussed
    businesses, felt threatened and responded
    accordingly but were a distinct minority.

38
The focus of the CER/SEM processes
  • The initial focus was reducing trade barriers,
    especially tariffs.
  • It evolved progressively to include non-tariff
    barriers and behind the border measures, such as
    standards, regulatory policies and processes,
    financial markets, investment, qualifications,
    tax harmonisation, etc.

39
  • But, many of these changes were very slow and of
    limited scope.
  • Post tariff reductions behind the border
    issues became more difficult as the benefits were
    more complex and domestic constituencies, which
    were less attuned to the importance of
    competitiveness, more resistant.

40
  • On the other hand these issues, well handled,
    tended to have substantial competitiveness
    benefits.

41
The handbrake of politics
  • As issues became more politically difficult
    progress slowed dramatically, in spite of the
    intense pressure on business to become more
    competitive, and from business for faster CER/SEM
    progress.
  • In spite of the strong A-NZ business alignment
    post-CER progress has been slow.

42
The consequences
  • CER meant major gains for business and the two
    economies, from tariff reductions and improved
    border processes and the increasing alignment of
    standards, financial markets, regulatory
    processes, and so on.
  • In NZ, and perhaps to a lesser extent in
    Australia, it was part of a process of
    transformation to a more outwardly focussed,
    competitive economy.

43
  • It probably also contributed to a closer social
    alignment, including in sport and culture a
    stronger sense of shared opportunities and risks.
  • In A-NZ business there is now a much stronger
    focus on the capability and performance of
    people, rather than their nationality.

44
  • However, the slow pace of progress over at least
    the last decade has been costly for the two
    economies - probably NZ in particular.
  • And the political reluctance was mirrored in the
    modest pace of domestic reform to improve
    competitiveness.

45
  • The externally focussed, resource based sectors
    in the two economies are strong.
  • This contrasts with the non-resource based parts
    of the two economies.
  • In NZs case the output of the vital tradables
    sector (goods and services) peaked in about 2006
    and has declined steadily since

46
  • This reflects, to a substantial extent, a lack of
    competitiveness and the pressures of foreign
    competition.
  • In this context, the very slow progress with
    CER/SEM initiatives is directly relevant.
  • Such issues are not unique to Australia and New
    Zealand.

47
Session One QA
  • Ambassador David Taylor
  • New Zealand

48
Services IntegrationExperiences of
CERChristopher FindlayUniversity of Adelaide
49
Why services integration matters
  • Context of services industry development
  • Services sector grows with rising income levels
    demand and supply side factors
  • But also there are new business models in
    services supply chains matter like they do in
    goods
  • Gains from international business
  • Gains from specialisation and access to variety

50
Why services integration matters (cont.)
  • Costs in trading systems
  • Links to trade facilitation
  • Participation matters
  • Value of reducing the costs of entering the
    trading system
  • Competition is the goal

51
Challenges of services reform
  • Challenges
  • Nature of barriers
  • Agencies involved,
  • Continuing concerns about market failure,
    including the nature of competition
  • How can trade agreements help?
  • Binding policy, guiding principles, schedules
  • Concerns about diversion and competition
  • Links to domestic reform

52
Approach in CER
  • negative list
  • definitions
  • market access
  • national treatment,
  • access to the agreement
  • coverage of modes
  • mutual recognition
  • best endeavours

53
Assessments
  • benchmark agreement compared to others
  • good coverage
  • horizontal reservations not significant
  • liberal rule of origin
  • movement of people
  • talking points
  • inscriptions, investment, business law
  • impact studies work in progress

54
Lessons
  • Wider reform matters - services reform best
    driven by domestic reform agenda
  • Leadership is important define the goal
  • Engagement from within an important driver
    which can be mobilised
  • Continuing process as times change and shocks
    occur

55
Australia and New ZealandEstablishing joint
bodies
  • Marc Mowbray-dArbelaAssistant
    SecretaryLegislative Review BranchDepartment of
    Finance and DeregulationAustralia

56
Options for countries wishing to achieve a common
approach to a particular activity
  • Unilateral reform in one country to align its
    practices with another countryor
  • Bilateral non-legally binding undertakingsor
  • Bilateral legally binding commitments- such as
    the establishment of a joint body

57
Australia New Zealand Therapeutic Products
Authority (Proposed)
  • A joint body to replace 2 existing bodies
  • Purpose to regulate common standards for
    therapeutic goods in both countries
  • Would have an enforcement role in both countries

58
Difficulties
  • Involved both countries adjusting some of their
    normal internal approaches.
  • Whole process took much longer and was more
    difficult than anticipated

59
Advantages
  • Trade off was there would be considerable
    advantages for both countries
  • Lower compliance costs for business
  • Lower administration costs for both governments
  • Increased regulatory effectiveness
  • Greater strategic understanding

60
Lessons learned
  • Consider more than one option for cooperation
  • Dont under-estimate the task
  • Differences between jurisdictions matter
  • Identify clear net benefits
  • Ensure clear political authority

61
Lessons learned
  • 6. Agreements and decisions reached need to be
    scrupulously recorded
  • 7. There is a need for dispute resolution
    mechanisms
  • 8. Always bear in mind that the parties are
    sovereign nations and we have different political
    systems

62
Lessons learned
  • 9. Seek and use specialist knowledge across
    respective bureaucracies
  • 10. Apply existing organisational governance
    principles

63
Lessons learned
  • Paper jointly developed in 2007 by New Zealand
    and Australia
  • Title Arrangements for Facilitating
    Trans-Tasman Government Institutional
    Cooperation
  • http//www.finance.gov.au/publications/arrangement
    s-for-facilitating-trans-tasman-co-operation/index
    .html

64
Looking forward
  • In most economic activity there will be a
    presumption in favour of cooperation
  • Need to be alert for any unintended consequences
    for the other party
  • Specifically, Australia and New Zealand recently
    agreed to resurrect the joint Therapeutic
    Products Authority project

65
CER/SEM Lessons Learned
  • Simon Murdoch
  • Former Chief Executive, Department of Prime
    Minister and Cabinet
  • Former Secretary of Foreign Affairs and Trade
  • New Zealand

66
Integration Partnership Forum
  • Saturday 25 June 2011
  • Kuala Lumpur
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