区域经济一体化与多边主义:以东盟-澳大利亚-新西兰自由贸易区和马来西亚-新西兰自由贸易区为例

V. Vitalis
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引用次数: 7

摘要

在2008年7月多哈回合谈判“受挫”之后,区域经济一体化重新流行起来。优惠贸易协定(pta)在亚洲和太平洋以及中美洲和南美洲推动了这一趋势,其数量之多令人震惊。在20世纪90年代,生效的自由贸易协定仅有5个,但现在有200多个正在谈判或生效。在这方面,亚太地区已经形成了一个快速发展的区域经济架构,包括跨太平洋伙伴关系协定(TPP)和区域全面经济伙伴关系协定(简称“东盟+6区域全面经济伙伴关系协定”)这两个重要的诸边协定,以及预期中的亚太自由贸易协定(FTAAP),该协定在去年年底的亚太经合组织(APEC)领导人北京会议上获得了新生。东盟作为一个集团或个别在这一领域特别忙碌,有意利用自由贸易区作为其自身区域一体化进程的补充。在中美洲和拉丁美洲,经济一体化也同样以不同的速度和不同的几何形状进行。与此同时,出于各种常见的原因,人们对pta的扩散存在一些担忧。贸易转移是一个现实,由于它们对农业和繁琐的原产地规则(ROO)等敏感问题的处理方法不够全面,许多自由贸易协定被认为充其量只是边际商业利益,最坏的情况是成为多哈发展回合结束的“绊脚石”。然而,本文认为,最近的优惠贸易区成果,如东盟-澳大利亚-新西兰自由贸易协定(AANZFTA)和马来西亚-新西兰自由贸易协定(MNZFTA),呈现了一幅更加微妙的图景。人们甚至有理由对pta如何成为多边主义的基石而非绊脚石持适度乐观的态度。四个不同的标准被用来评估AANZFTA和MNZFTA。这包括:1)农业市场准入自由化的广度和深度;2)存在(或不存在)wto +承诺;3)如何降低复杂ROO等风险;4)引入对企业具有直接商业价值的定制解决方案(例如,方便商务访客访问)。本文认为,亚安自贸协定和中澳自贸协定都为世贸组织就如何将亚安自贸协定和中澳自贸协定所取得的成果多边化提供了基础。新西兰在这两个高质量和全面的pta中的作用和经验可能会引起持久的兴趣。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Regional Economic Integration and Multilateralism: The Case of the ASEAN-Australia-New Zealand FTA and the Malaysia-New Zealand FTA
Regional economic integration is back in vogue following the "stumble" in the Doha Round in July 2008. Preferential trade agreements (PTAs) are driving this trend in Asia and the Pacific as well as in Central and South America, and the sheer volume of PTAs is striking. In the 1990s there were barely five PTAs in force, but now there are more than 200 either under negotiation or in force. In this regard, Asia and the Pacific has developed a rapidly evolving regional economic architecture that spans two major plurilateral agreements, the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (or ASEAN+6 RCEP), as well as the putative Free Trade Agreement of the Asia-Pacific (FTAAP), which received a new lease on life through the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) leaders' meeting in Beijing late last year. ASEAN, as a group or individually, has been particularly busy in this sphere, deliberately using PTAs as a supplement to its own regional integration process. In Central and Latin America, economic integration has been similarly pursued at variable speeds and in variable geometries. In the meantime, there have been some concerns about the proliferation of PTAs for all the usual reasons. Trade diversion is a reality and with their less-than-comprehensive approach to sensitive issues like agriculture and burdensome rules of origin (ROO), many PTAs are perceived as being at best of marginal business interest and at worst a "stumbling block" to conclusion of the Doha Development Round. This paper argues, however, that more recent PTA outcomes, like the ASEAN-Australia-New Zealand FTA (AANZFTA) and the Malaysia-New Zealand FTA (MNZFTA) present a rather more nuanced picture. There may even be some grounds for modest optimism about how PTAs can be building—not stumbling—blocks for multilateralism. Four distinct criteria are used to assess the AANZFTA and the MNZFTA. These include: 1) the breadth and depth of agricultural market access liberalization; 2) the existence (or non-existence) of WTO-plus commitments; 3) how the risks of complex ROO, etc., are mitigated; and 4) the introduction of bespoke solutions of direct commercial value to business (e.g., facilitated business visitor access). The paper suggests that both the AANZFTA and the MNZFTA provide the basis for engagement at the WTO on how to multilateralize the outcomes secured through the AANZFTA and the MNZFTA. The role and experience of New Zealand in both of these high quality and comprehensive PTAs is something that may be of enduring interest.
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