Dumping a free trade
deal
For the past two years Australian exporters’ prospects have
been jollied along by forecasts of a looming free trade agreement with their giant
northern neighbor.
Once in place grain carriers and beef boats would sail past
unconcerned customs officials and into the increasingly hungry ports of the
world’s fourth largest nation; Indonesian vegetable and mineral oils will head
Down Under to a similar welcome.
Prefacing this nirvana have been big show-and-sell missions
to the Archipelago, ministerial handshake photo-ops and glowing statements
implying negotiations are running briskly and on the same page.
So all being well the Indonesia-Australia Comprehensive
Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) should be signed before 2018 dawns.
However all is not well and that sunrise now seems remote.
The possibilities have been eclipsed - not by nationalist
Indonesians fearing floods of foreign goods, but by parochial politics in
Australia.
Late last month [april] the Federal Government abruptly announced
dumping duties on Indonesian copy paper imports.
“The impact of the decision is potentially
lethal,” Australia-Indonesia Business Council President Debneth Guharoy told
members.
“It flies in the face of the visiting President’s
pointed request in Sydney for a fair go on paper and palm oil. (In February Indonesian
President Joko ‘Jokowi’ Widodo promoted the CEPA in Australia.)
“We unilaterally decide to turn the (asylum
seeker) boats around, stop the exports of live cattle, raise hell over the
death penalty and now rollback their paper. Each and every time, we expect the
Indonesians to bow to our self-promoted higher standards, our much-touted lofty
principles.
“Those of us who have lived in, worked in or
frequently travel to Asia cringe at the disdain with which these proclamations
are treated by our neighbors.”
Indonesia Institute President
Ross Taylor, a former national vice-president of the AIBC, warned that the problem
should be “handled with subtlety”.
“Otherwise we run the risk of
this tariff issue becoming a catalyst - for those who are anti-free trade
- to have the CEPA stall or collapse,” he told Strategic Review. “That
would be a great disappointment.
“Getting an agreement was always
going to be a tough task -
Indonesia is really focused on the need for big infrastructure projects that
can be funded by North Asian countries.
“However it can be done with
goodwill and considered perseverance by both sides. The decision by Australian
officials to impose the tariff at this time was less than helpful; Mr Guharoy
is right in that regard and we share his concern, as would Indonesia.”
The head of Indonesia's negotiation
team was reported by Fairfax Media claiming the duties would affect
discussions.
“We explained to Australia that it (the
dumping accusation) is not true, but they insisted just to protect their
industry,” Deddy Saleh was quoted as saying.
“So it means there is unfairness. How
can we conduct negotiations when we know that our counterpart is not fair?
Negotiation takes mutual trust from both sides.”
The duties will please supporters
of trade barriers; they argue free trade agreements are an easy way to avoid
developing complex policies to stimulate local yields and build food self-sufficiency. Instead FTAs favor efficient producers like
Australian wheatgrowers who can swamp local markets and put poor farmers out of
business
‘Dumping’
means an exporter is selling goods overseas below the homeland price.
Apart from deliberate attempts to weaken rivals
through trade wars, there are two main reasons for dumping: A manufacturer has
a surplus it can’t shift at home, or its products are being subsidised by
government for local political reasons, such as keeping an unprofitable factory
running to save jobs.
The upset
started when a private company in Victoria complained to the independent Australian
Anti-Dumping Commission that paper manufacturers in Indonesia (and some other
countries) were undercutting local prices and threatening profits and jobs. The Commission agreed and told the
government.
Despite
Australian Paper’s nationalistic name the company is owned by Nippon Paper
Industries of Japan.
Its two
mills are in Gippsland, a rural area 160 kilometers east of Melbourne. AP is the biggest employer with around 1,300
on the payroll. It makes about 600,000
tonnes of paper products a year and much is exported.
The
unemployment rate in Gippsland is 9.42 per cent against the national average of
5.7 per cent, according to Australian Bureau of Statistics figures.
To stop interest in trade with Indonesia flagging after the
latest setback the AIBC has asked National Development Planning Minister Dr
Bambang Brodjonegoro to help buoy the disheartened.
“For the first time ever, a ranking Indonesian Minister will
visit five of our capital cities (in June) on a whistle-stop tour,” said
Guharoy who claims Indonesia could be the fifth largest
economy by 2050 with Australia then ranking 32.
“The mission is to talk about Indonesia's economic outlook,
the opportunities they present and against that backdrop, encourage Australian
enterprises to engage.”
The AIBC has been pushing local businesses to recognise
openings in the Indonesian market with 250 million consumers and a growth rate
of more than five per cent compared with Australia’s 2.4 per cent.
Indonesia is Australia’s 12th
largest trade partner, mainly importing wheat, beef and sugar, and selling oil
and some manufactured goods. Total
two-way business is worth about US $11.4 billion.
An AIBC delegation will appear before a Parliamentary Inquiry
on the Trading Relationship with Indonesia in Canberra this month. [may]
“We have an unintelligent relationship with our large neighbour and it
does warrant examination,” said Gutharoy. “But I'm not so sure that the
politicians will welcome the candor.”
Australia’s dumping duties are likely
to be appealed to the Geneva-based World Trade Organisation, a body not known
for swift decision-making. Unless the Indonesians ignore Australian
protectionism and abandon their own, a free trade deal is unlikely anytime
soon.
First published in Strategic Review, 26 May 2017 - http://www.sr-indonesia.com/web-exclusives/view/dumping-a-free-trade-deal
No comments:
Post a Comment