After many years of negotiations, the European Union (EU) and Canadian treaty was finally signed at the EU-Canada Summit in Brussels on October 27, 2016.
The EU considers it to be “a milestone in European trade policy” and “the most ambitious trade agreement that the EU has ever concluded.”
Those in favor of CETA argue that it will boost trade between the EU and Canada. Critics argue that the agreement is unduly favorable to businesses and may lead to a lowering of regulatory standards. With a provisional application possible in the near future, let’s take a closer look at what’s at stake and why CETA matters.
In 2015, Canada was the EU's 12th most important trading partner, accounting for 1.8% of the EU's total external trade. The EU was Canada's second most important trading partner, after the U.S., with around 9.5% of Canada's total external trade in goods. The value of bilateral trade in goods between the EU and Canada was about 63 EUR/90 CAD billion in 2015.
Machinery, chemicals, and transport equipment dominate the EU's exports of goods to Canada. Pearls, precious metals, and mineral products dominate the imports of goods from Canada. Machinery and chemicals also constitute an important part of the EU's imports from Canada.
CETA is expected to give exporters across the EU & Canada improved access to one of the world's most developed markets. Canada would gain preferential access to the largest market in the world, a market with over 500 million consumer and a GDP of almost $18 trillion. As such, over 98% of customs duties will be abolished from day one of its application.
The pact will become the biggest bilateral initiative after the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) sealed by Canada, Mexico, and the US (CETA is deeper in ambition and broader in scope than NAFTA). But CETA is not only about duty savings, it is, according to Cecilia Malmström and Chrystia Freeland, “a progressive agreement that will set a new standard for international trade” and “the most forward-looking free trade agreement that Canada or the EU have ever negotiated”. Could it serve as a standard bearer for future free trade agreements?
Opponents of CETA argue that the deal will lower the EU’s environmental, health, and food safety standards. They remain unconvinced about the reforms to the investment provisions, arguing that these give foreign investors special privileges and may deter governments from legislating in the public interest for fear of litigation.
CETA is also seen by some as a way of bringing in elements of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (T-TIP), the EU-US proposed FTA deal, through the back door. Recently, Wallonia, a French-speaking area in southern Belgium, voted against CETA for fear of local workers being laid off due to cheaper farming and industrial imports. Belgian law requires the backing of all seven regional, federal, and linguistic entities for the deal to be accepted by the national government.
EU companies, whether big or small, will have new opportunities to grow and expand thanks to CETA since it will facilitate better conditions for doing business in Canada and the EU in comparison to other countries.
In Particular, it will provide Canadian businesses with a competitive advantage in the EU market, something that is not familiar to any of their competitors from non-EU G-7 countries, including the United States.
Proponents of CETA say it will:
CETA will not only benefit companies but also other stakeholders (according to governments):
Both Canada and the EU would reduce or eliminate customs duties on goods originating in either country, in accordance with the tariff elimination schedules provided in the Annex of the final text. To benefit from this preferential customs duty, goods must be originating from either the EU or Canada under the rules of origin set out in the Protocol on Rules of Origin and Origin Procedures.
In CETA, goods have preferential treatment if the importer can prove to customs that these have been wholly obtained (be manufactured from raw materials or components which have been grown or produced in Canada or the EU) or have undergone specifically determined working or processing.
The CETA draft shows the list of the working or processing each product manufactured from non-originating materials or components must undergo in order to obtain originating status. As such, CETA also has published its “list rules” and is based on the structure of the HS. So before being able to determine what processing a specific product must undergo, it is necessary to know its HS classification.
The European Commission has put CETA forward as a “mixed agreement” while maintaining its strict legal view that CETA is an “EU-only” agreement. This means:
The agreement may be provisionally implemented after consent from the European Parliament but before ratification by Member States.
Only those areas of the agreement falling within EU competence may be provisionally applied (for example, phasing out tariffs on commodities like seafood, new market access to products like European cheese, and changes to open up areas like government procurement). Critics argue that this could cover most of CETA, but there have been recent indications that the controversial investment provisions may be excluded.
Free trade agreements (FTAs) can be a source of significant cost savings for importers, but many companies forego these benefits because of the effort to manually administer them.
Amber Road simplifies and automates the qualification and administration process of free trade agreements so that companies can take advantage of these duty savings opportunities.
Amber Road’s solutions help companies identify which products may be eligible for preferential treatment, based on Harmonized Schedule (HS) classification and source country.
The user-friendly search wizard simplifies complex HS classifications by providing all of the information necessary to choose the right product classification. Amber Road also automates the process of applying the relevant rules of origin to the bill of materials to determine whether the product qualifies for a FTA.
SOURCE: Amber Road's Global Trade Talk blog'
Related: Best Practices for Leveraging Trade Agreements to Reduce Landed Costs