Friday, February 24, 2012

A Look at Turkey's Trade Policy and FTA with Mauritius

Turkey concluded an FTA with the first Sub Saharan African country, Mauritius, on September 9th 2011 and is expected to initiate negotiations with other EPA and EC FTA signatories.  This is because the customs union between Turkey and the EU, which entered into force on 1 January 1996, has been the main factor shaping Turkey's foreign trade policy.  In addition, the EU opened accession negotiations with Turkey in October 2005 and guidance on reform priorities is provided through the Accession Partnership, adopted in February 2008.

In the EU-Turkey customs union, the EU unilaterally eliminated all customs duties and equivalent measures for industrial products and processed agricultural products when the trade-related provisions of the Interim Agreement of the Protocol entered into force in September 1971, whereas Turkey as a developing country was accorded a transition period of 22 years.  

The EC-Turkey customs union also provides for a common external tariff for the products covered, and foresees that Turkey will align its trade-related legislation with the EU acquis in several areas essential for market access, e.g. with respect to product standards.  The customs union covers all industrial products as well as the industrial component of processed agricultural goods, TRIPS, and competition policy, but does not extend to agricultural commodities, services, or government procurement.  The EU however offers Turkey a preferential regime on imports of certain agricultural products. Negotiations on services and government procurement were launched in 2000, but are now part of Turkey's accession process. 

The customs union also provides provision for:

  • free movement (elimination of customs duties and quantitative restrictions) 
  • alignment of Turkey on the EC common external tariff, including preferential arrangements (even GSP), and harmonisation of commercial policy measures;
  • approximation of customs law, and
  • approximation of other laws (intellectual property, competition, taxation, etc.)
  • the adoption by Turkey of measures equivalent to the EU's common commercial policy

The European Union remains Turkey's most important trading partner and investor.  For instance, the EU accounted for nearly 70% of total FDI inflows into Turkey during 2005-10.  Nearly 40% of its imports come from the EU, and just over 50% of exports go to the EU. Machinery and transport equipment dominate EU imports from Turkey followed by manufactured articles which account for 24.3%. Main EU exports to Turkey are machinery and transport material (45.1%), chemical products (17.1%) and manufactured goods (15.1%).Globally,  Turkey ranks 7th in the EU's top import list and 5th as an export market.  However, the dominance of the EU in Turkey's foreign trade has declined markedly over the last five years, reflecting a notable shift in Turkish exports towards growth markets in its neighbourhood, in North Africa, certain CIS countries, and in Asia. 

Other main Turkish export markets in 2010 were Iraq (5.3%), Russia (4.1 %), USA (3.4%), United Arab Emirates (2.9%) and Iran (2.7%). Imports into Turkey came from other key markets include: Russia (11.7%), China (9.4%), USA (6.7%), Iran (4.2%) and South Korea (2.6%). 

Turkey currently has about 17 FTAs in force which include one with the EFTA countries, Israel, Macedonia (FYR), Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Palestinian Authority, Tunisia, Morocco Syria, Egypt, Albania, Montenegro, Serbia, Georgia, Chile, Jordan, Lebanon and Mauritius.

The Mauritius-Turkey FTA provides enhanced duty free access on most industrial products.  All Mauritian industrial products will enter Turkey duty free with the exception of some 70 lines related to textiles which will be phased on four years.  Mauritius in return will offer duty free access to more than 80% of its tariff lines to Turkish industrial products.  In any case Mauritius is a duty free island with over 80% of applied tariffs at zero. 

Why the exclusion of agricultural products? Turkey, even though a member of the G-33 , ranks amongst the largest agricultural producers in the world and the main crop is wheat of which the country is over 90% self-sufficient. With corn, Turkey is about 80% self-sufficient and is a net-exporter of barley. Other major crops include fruit and vegetables, nuts, tobacco, cotton, and sugar. Turkey is also one of the major milk producers in the world, predominantly for domestic consumption of cheese and yoghurt.  While Turkey has specialized feed lots and dairy farms, and large-scale commercial poultry farms, livestock production is mainly extensive and small-scale.  

Useful to note that Turkish agricultural policy was adopted with a view to aligning it more closely with the EU Common Agricultural Policy.  Turkey's main policy objectives are food security and food safety, and raising the self-sufficiency level for selected net-imported products;  improving productivity and competitiveness;  ensuring sustainable farm incomes;  rural development;  and improving institutional capacity.

For comparison, by the end of 2007, the 6 ESA EPA States: Comoros, Madagascar, Mauritius, Seychelles, Zambia and Zimbabwe agreed an interim EPA with the EU. Mauritius in that agreement submitted an individual schedule which is annexed to the interim EPA and liberalises 96% of EU imports into Mauritius compared to a liberalisation of 80% with Turkey, possibly due to the inclusion of some agricultural products in the EPA.

What appears unfortunate in the Mauritius-Turkey FTA is that Turkey seems to have offered market access predominately in industrial goods, where Turkey is competitive. However few SSA African countries are neither productive nor competitive in industrial manufacturing. With Turkey being an emerging industrial exporter, the loss of revenue on the import side for African countries could be an area of concern. In agriculture, Turkey provides subsidized support which is equivalent to the EU Common Agricultural Policy.  

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

The EU Single Market Services Directive

The Directive on Services in the Internal Market (the Services Directive 2006/123/EC) was adopted in December 2006. The Directive liberalises the internal EC services market in that it requires Member States to abolish discriminatory requirements, such as nationality or residence requirements, and particularly restrictive requirements, such as “economic needs” tests (requiring businesses to prove to the authorities that there is a demand for their services). It also requires the review of other burdensome requirements which may not always be justified (such as territorial restrictions or minimum number of employees).

The EU member States were provided a three-year transitional period to transpose the Directive into national legislation. However, several member States missed the end-2009 deadline, and work to implement the Directive continued throughout 2010. The Directive requires the Member States to simplify procedures and formalities that service providers need to comply with. In particular, it requires Member States to remove unjustified and disproportionate burdens and to substantially facilitate: the establishment of a business, i.e. cases in which a natural or legal person wants to set up a permanent establishment in a Member State, and the cross-border provision of services, i.e. cases in which a business wants to supply services across borders in another Member State, without setting up an establishment there. 

During 2010, the Commission was monitoring the implementation by the member States, of both the new legal frameworks adopted in order to implement the Services Directive as well as their efforts to establish operational "Points of Single Contact" (PSCs), notably the online portals providing businesses with information about the requirements and procedures to be complied with, and the "Internal Market Information Systems" facilitating administrative cooperation between the authorities of the member States. The PSCs are certainly the most visible benefit of the Services Directive for businesses. They are meant to become fully fledged e-government portals allowing future entrepreneurs and existing businesses to easily obtain online all relevant information relating to their activities (applicable regulations, procedures to be completed, deadlines, etc.) with the ability to apply online and across borders. 

Although the vast majority of the member States have chosen to implement the general principles and obligations of the Directive through a single act, implementation of the general principles has been carried out through several acts in France and Germany. In addition, all member States have had to amend or abrogate existing legislation to ensure conformity with the provisions of the Directive.

The Services Directive does not harmonize national legislation applicable to the services sector, but obliges member States to screen their authorization schemes to ensure that they are maintained only if non-discriminatory, justified by an overriding reason relating to public interest, and proportionate.

The Services Directive applies to the provision of a wide range of services – to private individuals and businesses – barring a few specific exceptions. For example, it covers: 

distributive trades (including retail and wholesale of goods and services) 
the activities of most regulated professions (such as legal and tax advisers, architects, engineers, accountants, surveyors) 
construction services and crafts 
business-related services (such as office maintenance, management consultancy, event organisation, debt recovery, advertising and recruitment services) 
tourism services (e.g. travel agents) 
leisure services (e.g. sports centres and amusement parks) 
installation and maintenance of equipment 
information society services (e.g. publishing – print and web, news agencies, computer programming) 
accommodation and food services (hotels, restaurants and caterers) 
training and education services 
rentals and leasing services (including car rental) 
real estate services 
household support services (e.g. cleaning, gardening and private nannies). 

The Services Directive does not apply to the following services, which are explicitly excluded:

financial services 
electronic communications services with respect to matters covered by other community instruments 
transport services falling into Title V of the EC Treaty 
healthcare services provided by health professionals to patients to assess, maintain or restore their state of health where those activities are reserved to a regulated health profession 
temporary work agencies' services 
private security services 
audiovisual services 
gambling 
certain social services provided by the State, by providers mandated by the State or by charities recognised as such by the State 
services provided by notaries and bailiffs (appointed by an official act of government). 

The Commission has not drawn up concrete plans to cover the other excluded services. Services activities are in any event always subject to the EC Treaty provisions, notably the fundamental freedoms of establishment (Article 43) and free movement of services (Article 49). The Services Directive applies only to EU (EEA) citizens and legal entities established in the EU (EEA), and does not oblige member States to consider changes applicable to non-EU services suppliers.