Showing posts with label US trade policy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US trade policy. Show all posts

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Clinton in plea for workers' rights in Asia

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (centre L) speaks during the 2nd Friends of Lower Mekong (FLM) Ministerial Meeting held on the sidelines of the 45th Annual Ministerial Meeting of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in Phnom Penh. Clinton Friday urged Southeast Asian nations to promote workers' rights and improve labour conditions as a means of spurring economic growth
South Korean Foreign Minister Kim Sung-hwan (C), US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (L) and Japanese Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba (R) shake hands at the Peace Palace in Phnom Penh on July 12. Clinton Friday urged Southeast Asian nations to promote workers' rights and improve labour conditions as a means of spurring economic growth
AFP – July ,13 , 2012

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton Friday urged Southeast Asian nations to promote workers' rights and improve labour conditions as a means of spurring economic growth.

"Standing up for workers' rights and high labour standards is both right and moral, it's also smart and strategic," Clinton told a women's forum in the Cambodian town of Siem Reap.

Respecting workers' rights "leads to positive economic outcomes including higher levels of investment. And bringing women into the economy has ripple effects," she said, adding it boosted equal opportunity and raised taxes for governments.

Her comments come as US businesses are poised to push into Myanmar, virtually virgin territory for the West, as the United States only this week eased decades-old sanctions to allow US investment but attached stringent reporting conditions.

Tuesday, September 06, 2011

US companies find Asean market increasingly important

KUALA LUMPUR (Sept 5, 2011 - Bernama): American companies expect the Asean (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) market to become increasingly important for their businesses, according to the findings of the Asean Business Outlook Survey 2011.

The majority of companies or some 73% of the survey respondents said they expect Asean's importance to their business will increase over the next two years, with 85% of them planning to expand their business in Asean.

No company is planning on any cutback, it said.

The survey also revealed that the ASEAN Free Trade Agreement was vital for US businesses, with 80% of respondents saying that their companies used the tariff benefits of the FTAs Asean has completed with its trade partners.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

U.S. and Cambodia Chamber of Commerce ink deal on trade loan guarantees

PHNOM PENH, Aug. 25 (Xinhua) -- The U.S. Export-Import Bank ( Exim Bank) and the Cambodia Chamber of Commerce (CCC) inked the Memorandum of Understanding on trade loan guarantees to boost trade between the U.S. and ASEAN member countries, according to a statement released by the U.S. embassy here on Thursday.

The MoU was signed between the U.S. Ambassador to Cambodia, Carol A. Rodley and Kith Meng, the CCC's president, earlier this week.

The agreement between the two entities reflects an initiative under the U.S.-ASEAN Trade and Investment Framework Arrangement ( TIFA), said the statement.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Clothing Exports to US Jump in First Quarter [-The US should tie democracy to import of Cambodian clothing to the US]

Heng Reaksmey, VOA Khmer
Phnom Penh Monday, 23 May 2011
“As in Cambodia, if we have political turmoil and instability in the country, we can’t order to buy goods from other countries.”
Cambodia’s clothing exports to the US jumped 26 percent in the first quarter of 2011, compared to the year before, signaling improvements after the 2008 economic crisis, officials said Monday.

Kong Puthear, director of statistics for the Ministry of Commerce, said some economic recovery in the US caused the bump in orders. “As in Cambodia, if we have political turmoil an instability in the country, we can’t order to buy goods from other countries.”

This year’s first quarter exports reached $521 million, up from $411 million in the same period of 2010, according to ministry statistics. Total exports for 2010 were $1.84 billion.

Cambodia was one of the 10 cheapest suppliers for the US clothing market in 2010, along with Bangladesh, El Salvador and Honduras

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Asean Leaders Seek US Trade Attention

Men Kimseng, VOA Khmer
Washington, DC Tuesday, 11 May 2010

“There is also the potential for modernizing Cambodian rice production, which the US should consider investing in."
Asean trade ministers spent a week in the US this month, meeting with congressmen, business leaders and policymakers in the capital and Seattle, to promote the region’s economic potential.

The 10-nation bloc of countries has become one of the fastest-growing regions in the world, but Asean leaders need to convince Americans to look at it as a single unit, Asean’s secretary-general, Surin Pitsuwan, said.

“We are part of Southeast Asia, which is expected to be a locomotive pulling the global economy along,” he said. “And I think in the past we have never disappointed them, and we want to do more.”

Asean has potential in automobile production, green technology and infrastructure, among others, he said.

Cambodia, “with more than 50 percent of its population below 20 years of age,” could be especially attractive to technology investors, Pan Sorasak, secretary of state for the Ministry of Commerce, told VOA Khmer.

“There is also the potential for modernizing Cambodian rice production, which the US should consider investing in,” he said. “And there is tourism, where we can have cooperation among airlines.”

Cambodia lags behind other Asean countries in its human resources and infrastructure, but the bloc works to help members, he said, and members don’t compete for external partners.

Asean includes Brunei, Burma, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.

It is the fifth-largest trading partner and fourth-largest export market for the US, with two-way trade reaching nearly $180 billion in 2008, according to the US-Asean Business Council. US exports to Asean were more than $66 billion that year.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Workforce Abuse Jeopardizes US Trade Status: Union

Uncle Sam WARNS you!

By Taing Sarada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Washington
26 November 2009


If the government continues to ignore labor violations and fails to address working conditions, it risks its special trade access to lucrative US markets, a leading labor leader said in Washington last week.

Marking the 10-year anniversary of a preferential Cambodia-US trade agreement in Washington, Art Thorn, president of the Cambodian Labor Confederation, said unfair practices and poor working conditions will continue without the intervention of the international community.

They exploit the workforce, and the employers fire factory union leaders or violate workers’ rights when the law isn’t well enforced,” he said at the World Bank’s International Finance Corporation.

“I think what has happened will continue to happen if the government and donor countries such as America do not help,” he said. “Our union is trying to work hard to solve the issues, but in reality our power is very limited. And if the leader of the country doesn’t help, then it will be impossible for us to do it alone.”

Cambodia’s economy is heavily dependent on the garment sector, a major earner of foreign currency, but observers warn that abusive practices and a lack of worker rights could drive buyers away.

The Freed Trade Union of Workers of the Kingdom of Cambodia, the country’s largest union, has warned that factory employers regularly violate labor codes, denying time off and maternity leave, paying salaries irregularly or even declaring bankruptcy and failing to pay workers when they strike. Union leaders say they are routinely discriminated against in their efforts to organize workers.

However, Cambodian trade officials say they have a strong labor law they try to enforce, and they have worked in recent years to brand Cambodian garments under fair practices.

In an interview with VOA Khmer on a trip to Washington last week, Commerce Minister Cham Prasidh said the law is well written and to international standards. His ministry sends monitors to factories often, he said.

“Honestly, we respect our labor rights more than any other countries,” he said. “We have a good law, but sometimes we also have some slow practices and a lack of enforcement.”

Trina Tocco, a member of the International Labor Rights Forum, based in Washington, told VOA Khmer that if Cambodia does not focus on the rights of workers, they will face abuses in the workplace.

John Ritchotte, a specialist in labor relations at the International Labour Organization, based in Bangkok, told VOA Khmer the labor law may need updated.

“The Cambodian labor law is now 10 years old, and like any law it needs to be adjusted and adapted to the change of circumstances,” he said at the IFC in Washington. “And now that there is a growing economy, a more diverse economy, they need to adapt the law to that reality.”

Thursday, October 29, 2009

US Export Import Bank Open to Cambodia

By Men Kimseng, VOA Khmer
Original report from Washington
28 October 2009


The Export Import Bank of the United States is now open to provide financing for purchases of US exports by private-sector buyers in Cambodia.

The opening follows Cambodia’s removal from a US trade blacklist in June by President Barack Obama, “which has allowed the bank to do a study in order to determine, along with other US agencies, that we should be open to financing import into Cambodia from the United States on repayment terms up to seven years,” Phil Cogan, spokesman for the Ex-Im Bank, told VOA Khmer.

“So what that means is buyers in Cambodia who wish to purchase US high-quality goods and services can do so with potential financing from the United States Export Import Bank that will make their purchases available for financing,” he said.

US export to Cambodia remains small, about $154 million in 2008, compared to $2.4 billion in import from Cambodia. The US products available in Cambodia are vehicles, heavy machinery, electronics equipment, and health and sanitation.

Many local businessmen said they were glad to hear the news.

Cogan said interest rates for Cambodia are at favorable levels, and that even small deals could be made.

The so-called Ex-Im Bank is the official export credit agency of the United States. The federal agency, now in its 75th year, helps to create and maintain US jobs by financing the sales of exports, primarily to emerging markets throughout the world.

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Cambodia's garment mills face impasse

With US help, Cambodia became the model for successful garment manufacturing and strong labor standards. (Photo: Chor Sokunthea/Reuters)

The once-favorable US tariffs that built a labor-friendly garment industry may now be its undoing.

September 05, 2007
By Erika Kinetz
Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor

Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Not much gets made in Cambodia except clothes.

Garments account for an astonishing 80 percent of this impoverished Southeast Asian nation's exports, and the World Bank estimates that the industry, which was worth $2.5 billion last year, helps support – directly or indirectly – about 1 in 5 Cambodians, according to government estimates.

US trade policy essentially created Cambodia's garment industry, thanks to a 1999 bilateral deal that granted Cambodia preferential access to US markets in exchange for guarantees on labor standards. Now some argue that US trade policy – in the form of high tariffs – is helping to undo it.

The irony is especially acute because many observers now look to Cambodia as a model of labor-friendly manufacturing, and they say that if Cambodia fails, it will mean the death not just of one industry in one nation, but of the dream of ethical manufacturing itself.

"There was a door for small countries like Cambodia," says Cambodia's minister of commerce, Cham Prasidh. "Now there is no more door. Those who can produce cheaper and faster will sell more."

And that means China.

Shifts in the global garment industry are favoring more developed nations, like China, over the world's poorest. US quotas that benefited Cambodia have expired – or will soon – and the question Cambodia now faces is how to compete with nations that have better infrastructure, more qualified labor forces, deeper supply chains, faster productivity growth, and cheaper electricity.

One easy answer for Cambodia would be to have its major trading partner – the United States, which accounts for nearly two-thirds of Cambodia's garment exports – eliminate its tariffs. Cambodian officials have been lobbying Congress since 2004 to cut those tariffs, which last year averaged nearly 16 percent. China paid, on average, just over 3 percent on its top US exports.

Mr. Cham led a delegation to Washington in July to drum up support in Congress for the TRADE Act, a bipartisan bill introduced in the Senate in February that would slash tariffs on goods from 14 poor Asian nations, including Cambodia.

The US already provides generous trade benefits to many of the world's poorest countries through regional agreements in Africa and the Caribbean, and the EU and Canada already grant Cambodia access to their markets nearly duty- and quota-free.

Cambodian officials are hoping that later this month, House Democrats will introduce legislation that would exempt all of the world's poorest nations, including Cambodia, from tariffs.

Roland Eng, Cambodia's former ambassador to the US, maintains that legislation favoring poor countries won't affect the level of US imports, merely the pattern. "Instead of importing from China, you will import more from least-developed countries," says Mr. Eng. "We're not preventing jobs from going to the US; we're preventing jobs from going to China," he adds.

For an underdeveloped nation, Cambodia already pays relatively more in duties than some developed economies. Edward Gresser, the director of the trade and global markets project at the Washington-based Progressive Policy Institute, said in an e-mail that as of mid-2006, the US had collected $196 million in tariffs on $1.1 billion worth of Cambodian goods, but only $199 million on $27 billion in imports from Britain.

For its part, the US Embassy in Phnom Penh says that the United States is considering trade benefits for Cambodia, but within the stalled Doha round of negotiations at the World Trade Organization. Government and garment-industry officials in Cambodia are hoping for a faster, more localized solution. They say they can't afford to wait.

Next year, US safeguards on Chinese garment imports are set to expire and international monitoring of Cambodia's factories, a cornerstone of Cambodia's 1999 trade deal with the US, may also cease. That could spell the end of Cambodia's labor-friendly garment sector, which has been held up as a model by the industrialized world.

But despite the good intentions, Cambodia's good labor practices cost money in the long term, and Van Sou Ieng, the chairman of the Garment Manufacturer's Association of Cambodia, says it will be hard to live up to those standards if Cambodia can't compete on price, which he says is impossible without tariff relief.

Eng says the social and economic costs of a garment sector slowdown would be enormous. Most garment workers are women, who have left the traditionally protective structures of family and village that govern rural life. Unemployed, Eng says they will be particularly vulnerable to HIV infection and human trafficking. "All the social efforts of the past ten years will be in vain," he says.

It wasn't supposed to be that way. Rachel Louise Snyder, author of the forthcoming book "Fugitive Denim: A Moving Story of People and Pants in the Borderless World of Global Trade," says that if Cambodia's garment industry fails, the ramifications will extend far beyond the borders of this tiny nation.

"The industrialized world has set them up as an example of great positive social change that can be achieved with political and economic will," says Ms. Synder, who lives in Phnom Penh. "What does it say to the rest of the world if we allow them to fail?"