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Development Challenges in LowIncome Mekong : How Trade

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Vietnam, Lao, Cambodia (Mekong 3) and Myanmar performing poorly in this period ... Cambodia, Lao & Myanmar have a long way to go and should move quicker. Integration ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Development Challenges in LowIncome Mekong : How Trade


1
Development Challenges in Low-Income Mekong How
Trade Transport Facilitation Will Help
  • Kazi M.Matin Cheanchom Thongjen
  • World Bank

Investment, Trade and Transport Facilitation in
ACMECS Workshop, Dusit Thani Hotel, Bangkok, Mar
ch 13, 2007
2
Coverage of Presentation
  • Background 1960-90 Strong performance following
    reforms since late 1980s
  • Private investment exports key drivers
  • Region cross-border investments exports
  • Why Trade-Transport Facilitation (TTF) is key for
    lower-income Mekong
  • What May World Bank do to support TTF

3
Background of war controls 1960-1990
  • Vietnam, Lao, Cambodia (Mekong 3) and Myanmar
    performing poorly in this period
  • Mekong-3 GDP per capita grow less than 1.5 a
    year vs 7 NIEs 4 ASEAN-4
  • Development Gap widened NIEs 1.5 to 10 and
    ASEAN-4 1.5 to 3
  • Per capita income of 4 low income Mekong fell to
    only 30 of ASEAN-4
  • Legacy of that period loss of human resources
    of infrastructure high poverty

4
Strong Performance- 1990-2005
  • Reforms in Mekong-3 in late 80s-early 90s
  • Trade/price control liberalization key reform
  • Private sector development key reform
  • Modest reforms in Myanmar too
  • Investments in Infrastructure
  • Investments in Human Development
  • Increased private investment and export growth
    with GDP growth and significant poverty-reduction

5
Trade Openness Increased
ASEAN-4 refers to Indonesia, Malaysia,
Philippines, and Thailand Source IMF, World E
conomic Outlook (2006)

6
Foreign Direct Investment Increased
Source IMF, World Economic Outlook (2006)
7
Exports Grew Rapidly from low base
Source IMF, World Economic Outlook (2006)
8
Exports move towards manufactures
Cambodia
Lao PDR
Vietnam
Source WITS (2006)
9
Real GDP Growth ASEAN-4
ASEAN-4 refers to Indonesia, Malaysia,
Philippines, and Thailand Source IMF, World E
conomic Outlook (2006) and World Bank (2006)
10
Poverty fell from high levels in 1990
Source IMF, World Economic Outlook (2006) and
World Bank (2006)
11
Private investment export growth (to world
region) are key drivers of growth poverty
reduction in ASEAN-4 (60-05) Mekong3
(90-05)Yet domestic constraints to private
investment further integration remain in
Mekong-3
  • See
  • ICA 2005
  • Doing Business 2006

12
Firms View of Investment Climate Constraints
from ICA
Source Investment Climate Survey, World Bank
13
Top 4 Constraints to Investment
  • Regulations Taxes all four countries
  • Macro market uncertainty all four
  • Infrastructure deficit all four
  • Skills two, mainly Thailand Vietnam
  • Financing two, mainly Lao Vietnam
  • Corruption only Cambodia

14
Regulations Starting a business
Source Doing Business 2007 Note Myanmar Data i
s unavailable
15
Regulations Registering Property
Source Doing Business 2007 Note Myanmar Data i
s unavailable
16
Regulations Trading Across Border
Source Doing Business 2007 Note Myanmar Data i
s unavailable
17
RegulationsImport/export cost (US per container)
Source Doing Business 2007
18
Regulations Getting Credit
Source Doing Business 2007 Note Myanmar Data i
s unavailable
19
Regulations Enforcing Contract
Source Doing Business 2007 Note Myanmar Data i
s unavailable
20
Summary
  • Thailand is a middle income country with a very
    favorable investment climate
  • Vietnam starting late has gone farthest has
    thus been growing faster, longer
  • Cambodia, Lao Myanmar have a long way to go and
    should move quicker

21
Integration
  • Market access is not a binding constraint for (a)
    increasing exports globally or (b) regionally
    given AFTA liberalization
  • BUT
  • Trade facilitation costs are binding
  • As is Regional Trade Transport Facilitation,
    especially over land borders

22
What Can be Done to Promote Private Investment
Regional Integration
  • --Actions Each Country Can Take
  • --Actions countries (govts private sector) can
    take jointly to reduce regional TTF costs
  • --Actions Donors Can Take with countries to
    reduce regional TTF costs

23
Actions Each Country Can take to promote private
investment
  • Reduce regulatory burden on investors
  • Develop transport power infrastructure
  • Enhance human development skills
  • Strengthen the financial sector

24
Actions each country can take to further regional
integration
  • Continue encouraging exports globally
  • Focus on regional exports as a drivers as this is
    the fastest-growing region, esp GMS ACMECS
    region
  • Promote Cross-Border investment for exports

25
Actions Countries Take Jointly Using regions
integration initiatives
  • Use ASEAN, GMS ACMECS programs to tap rapid
    regional growth
  • Use ASEAN to open up trading regimes
  • Use GMS constructed road Corridors linking
    physically ACMECS/GMS countries
  • Use ACMECS to support closer regional integration
    thru cross-border investments

26
Road Corridors linking Mekong Already Constructed
Under GMS
Source ADB
27
But they are barely used now
  • Yet investments for exports can continue to be a
    key driver of future growth poverty reduction
  • And region can play a key role through
    cross-border regional investments for exports
    into Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar Vietnam.
  • Making cross-border movement of goods competitive
    will be key to increasing such regional
    investments in ACMECS

28
Reduce Cost (time financial) of Cross-Border
Movement of Exports
  • NS, EW Southern road Corridors have reduced
    cost in non-border areas close to Corridors in
    Lao, Cambodia, Vietnam Myanmar
  • Further cost-reductions for Lao, Cambodia,
    Myanmar exports if TTF can be improved i.e.
    border crossing times lowered made predictable
    financial cost of movement lowered
  • Additional cost reductions possible for Lao,
    Myanmar Cambodia, only if TTF improvements
    raise traffic volume between Vietnam Thailand
    as well as between Thailand China

29
Supply responses to lower TTF costsin Lao,
Cambodia Myanmar
  • Areas adjacent to corridors, but distant from
    borders can now produce for exports
  • If corridor TTF improves costs come down
    further, other areas will export too
  • If corridor TTF improves traffic volume from
    higher-income countries grow, then costs of small
    consignments will fall more

30
Cross-Border Investments for Exports Response
  • Foreign/regional investment for exports
  • Exports thru seaports over land-borders
  • Land-borders important for poorer regions as GMS
    road Corridors connect poorer regions in ACMECS
    over land make exports from these regions
    competitive regionally
  • Contract plantation farming for exports in
    poorer regions around Corridors becomes
    competitive, as is tourism manufacturing

31
What more maybe needed to improve TTF reduce
costs
  • Implement Cross Border Transport agreements
    (CBTA) in 2008 as planned
  • Develop Implement a Detailed Customs Transit
    System building on CBTA
  • Implement all regionally/in parallel in all
    countries

32
What maybe needed for effective Implementation?
  • The Government private sector have to work
    together through stronger institutional
    arrangements including all countries of ACMECS
    GMS
  • Resources will have to be mobilized for
    implementation training, IT, institution
    building, monitoring
  • Donors can collaborate with ADB on TTF World
    Bank has regional funds for regional projects if
    needed

33
Thank You
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