13 November 2020

Chiang Mai, Thailand

In a webinar held on 10th November, economic experts, business owners, civil society organisations and parliamentarians  expressed their concerns about the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), a mega free trade agreement which is set to be signed on 15 November 2020.  Despite concerns being raised, governments have continued to negotiate RCEP in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic and global uncertainty. 

Jomo Kwame Sundaram, Former Assistant Director General for Economic and Social Development in FAO, explained that the disruption of economies is not only due to COVID-19 but also the undermining of multilateral arenas which affects most countries. “If we are serious about trade, especially in this difficult time, we should rethink how you can reconfigure the world and develop new capacities of our own economies, including much more consistent with sustainable development objectives and more egalitarian ways”.

UNCTAD Senior Economist, Rashmi Banga said free trade agreements (FTAs) like RCEP may further restrict policy and fiscal space of developing countries. In her analysis based on SMART methodology, assuming tariffs are removed on all products between RCEP countries, she finds that for most ASEAN countries imports post RCEP will rise more than their exports leading to worsening of their  balance of trade with respect to RCEP members. Developing countries are more vulnerable and are expected to be hit harder and will take more time to recover.  “ASEAN countries can only benefit from RCEP if they can really use the potential on Regional Value Chains which should link with the Global Value Chains. But mostly in  regional cooperation, such as RCEP, most ASEAN countries will lose the preferential access, and that access will go to more efficient producers and exporters, but how many countries in ASEAN can really compete with China?”, she added.

Kate Lappin, Asia Pacific Regional Secretary from the global federation of workers in public services, Public Services International, stressed that FTAs such as RCEP would also increase the pressure on governments to privatise, as public services need to be traded and compete on the market. This will have negative impacts on equality, including corrosive impacts on gender equality. “With the pandemic, the rules have demonstrated their effect on the government’s ability to respond to a crisis. Countries had to resort to multiple measures that can be construed as breaches of the trade rules in RCEP and other free trade deals. Signing onto RCEP will bind the hands of governments in taking measures in the public interest in crises to come, be it health or environmental.” Further, she said that free trade rules shift the weight of who has power in the economy away from workers and into the hands of MNCs and narrow economic interests. In fact, by constraining the policy space of future governments, deals like this are constraining the potential for future pro-worker governments to alter the economic rules.

Ian Syarif owner of PT Sipata Moda Indonesia, a local textile company, said that free trade agreements like RCEP will bypass trade diversified opportunities and give most benefit to organized countries like China that have their sole focus on industrial efficiency. RCEP will also increase possible transshipment activities where goods will be shipped to other RCEP participating countries with zero tariffs and eventually re-exported  to Indonesia, bypassing the trade remedies that the government has imposed. “We think it’s hard to pull back from this agreement, we tried but the government has been quite closed about RCEP”, Ian added.

Jayen Mehta, Senior General Manager, Amul Cooperative, India, explained how signing the RCEP could have led to loss of livelihood for 50 million rural milk producers and about US$40 billion revenue loss yearly to farmers. “A grassroots movement led by millions of milk producers and farmers in India including nationwide protests forced India to withdraw from RCEP negotiations”, he stressed. 

Prior to the signing, the text of RCEP will not be made available to the public, despite long standing calls to publish it from civil society organisations. It is important for both parliaments and the public to be able to provide critical inputs regarding the contents of RCEP as it will have a broad impact on human rights. Barry Coates, member of the New Zealand government’s Trade for All Advisory Board, expressed concern that free trade agreements are signed in secrecy. “The idea an international agreement will be signed without prior scrutiny, without an assessment of its impact is unacceptable”, he stressed. 

A Member of South Korea’s National Assembly, Jang Hye Yeong, also shared concerns regarding the lack of transparency of RCEP text. “The Korean Government has not released any information on RCEP except the chapter names. There are a few days left but if the final text is received after conclusion of the deal, we will continue to have discussion in the national assembly during the ratification process”, she added. 

RCEP’s rules will restrict government’s policy space to counter social, economic and climate crises exacerbated by COVID-19. Developing countries in ASEAN must conduct social and human rights impact analysis on RCEP before their governments sign or ratify this mega free trade agreement. 

For further information and media queries please contact: 

Neha Gupta, APWLD, neha@apwld.org

Susana Barria, Public Services International, susana.barria@world-psi.org

Rachmi Hertanti, Indonesia for Global Justice,  rachmi.hertanti@gmail.com