Vietnamese visit US as part of Trade Facilitation Initiative

Statement/News Release

This is a press release on behalf of the Global Alliance for Trade Facilitation, of which CIPE is a member. 
 

Washington, DC, USA – A delegation of Vietnamese government officials has been visiting the United States to gain insights into the US customs bond system as part of a pioneering trade facilitation initiative.

The project, which is being led by the Global Alliance for Trade Facilitation (the Alliance), aims to speed up the release of goods at Vietnamese ports by introducing a modern customs bond system, similar to that used in the US. Vietnam will be the first country outside the United States with such an all-encompassing system.

Delegates from Vietnam’s customs agencies and a number of other government ministries were hosted by US Customs and Border Protection for a week of knowledge sharing meetings and visits. The delegation met with representatives of US government agencies, insurers and traders who have experience of working with the US system. The trip included a visit to the Port of Baltimore, allowing delegates to see how the US system works in practice for customs officials and importers.

The customs bond system allows traders to purchase bonds issued by insurers to guarantee that they will comply with government regulations, pay all applicable duties and taxes, and submit all required permits and certificates. In exchange, customs expedites release of their goods. The release is conditional pending completion of all customs clearance formalities, and if the trader defaults, the bond is called.

Tackling Vietnamese customs delays is set to spark major change for the country, making international trade simpler, faster and more cost effective. The new system will help ensure compliance with Vietnam’s regulations and reduce administrative burden on border agencies, while making trade more predictable and efficient for businesses, particularly small and medium-sized enterprises. Ultimately, it will help to make Vietnam more internationally competitive as a trading partner and more attractive to foreign direct investment, strengthening its position as a regional manufacturing powerhouse.

The Alliance is a not-for-profit venture which brings together governments and businesses as equal partners to identify trade facilitation issues, such as customs delays and unnecessary red tape at borders, and implement targeted reforms to address them. It was set up to help governments implement the World Trade Organization’s Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) and to encourage sustainable development and poverty reduction.

Vietnam ratified the TFA in 2015 and has made improving trade facilitation a government priority.

Philippe Isler, Director of the Global Alliance for Trade Facilitation, said: “The delegation this week has been a major milestone for the Alliance project in Vietnam, and we are grateful to all those organisations in the public and private sectors that made it possible. “One of the main things we aim to do at the Alliance is encourage the sharing of best practice – all countries that trade are grappling with similar barriers and bottlenecks at borders and there is a real opportunity to learn from each other. We hope to now be able to reflect on the learnings from this week and move ahead to pilot the new system for Vietnam in the coming months.”

The Alliance’s unique approach to trade facilitation is to bring the public and private sector together as equal partners in the reform process and, in particular, leverage the expertise of the private sector.

Robert Kielbas, Vice President of Global Development at insurance group Roanoke, who has been heavily involved in the project said: “As a market leader of customs bonds in the US and with our extended experience introducing customs bond programs into developing countries, we truly appreciated the opportunity to partner with the Global Alliance for Trade Facilitation as their private sector foreign expert. It has been a pleasure working with the Vietnam delegation as they have been fully committed to this program. The next steps of the pilot program will be rewarding to everyone involved with this very special and unique initiative.”

The Alliance hopes to work with the government and private sector to launch a one-year pilot customs bond system for Vietnam later this year.

Ends

For more information, contact:

Ailsa Nicol, communications manager, Global Alliance for Trade Facilitation
Tel: +33 1 49 53 30 72, ailsa.NICOL@iccwbo.org

About the Global Alliance for Trade Facilitation

The Global Alliance for Trade Facilitation is a public-private partnership for trade-led growth. We believe that international trade should be simpler, faster and more cost-effective, creating new business opportunities, enabling greater economic and social development and reducing poverty. The Alliance is redefining the way trade facilitation reforms are implemented. We bring together governments and businesses as equal partners to identify trade facilitation issues such as customs delays and unnecessary red-tape at borders, and design and implement targeted reforms that deliver commercially quantifiable results.

Our work is designed to help governments in developing and least developed countries implement the World Trade Organization’s Trade Facilitation Agreement.

We are jointly led by the International Chamber of Commerce, the World Economic Forum and the Center for International Private Enterprise—in cooperation with our implementing partner Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ).

The Alliance is supported by the governments of the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia and Germany.

www.tradefacilitation.org
@GATFNews

About the Trade Facilitation Agreement

The Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) is a binding multilateral trade agreement between members of the World Trade Organization (WTO). The TFA was concluded in December 2013 and officially entered into force in February 2017. By signing up, countries commit to tackling the barriers to trade posed by burdensome border requirements. These barriers make it harder for businesses of all sizes to trade internationally but hurt small and medium-sized enterprises the most. The TFA is a unique opportunity to further development goals such as sustainable growth, poverty reduction and gender equality. Taken together, reforms have the potential to reduce trade costs by 14.3% on average and create around 20 million jobs, mostly in developing countries.

Published Date: April 10, 2018