african ports and maritime conference swakopmund 2011 trade facilitation and intra-african trade jon...

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African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra- African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation Crown Agents

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Page 1: African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation

African Ports and Maritime Conference

Swakopmund 2011

Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade

Jon Walden

Senior Adviser

Customs and Trade Facilitation

Crown Agents

Page 2: African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation

The current international trade environment involves complex international trade processes with disparate systems

Each international trade transaction requires an average of 40 documents of 200 data elements, with 15% repeated at least 30 times and 60-70% repeated more than once. (UNCTAD)

Page 3: African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation

International Trade Supply Chain

Page 4: African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation

CROWN AGENTS “4P” APPROACH

Crown Agents’ adopts a “4P” approach to implementing Trade Facilitative measures:

Improving Processes

Aligning Policy

Focusing People

Implementing Platform

Page 5: African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation

Typical cost elements in an international sale: The product Packing and handling Inland transport International transport / port charges / dwell time Insurance Documentation Customs clearance – export and import Security clearance – export and import Duties and taxes

Page 6: African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation

The Transport Issues Transport infrastructure – congested ports, road, rail, air Lack of competition Inter-modal capabilities – containerisation where

appropriate High transport costs – land locked countries Need for common standards (axle weights, height etc) Availability and capacity of suitable haulage – chilled

units / ventilated units Security (personnel and cargo) Availability of appropriate warehousing Import / export imbalance

Page 7: African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation

Distance

Time/ cost Transport to border

Border crossing

Transport to sea portWait at sea port

Need to identify – isolate – address bottlenecks

Methodology for international route analysis

Sea Transport

UNESCAP Time/Cost-Distance ModelUNESCAP Time/Cost-Distance ModelUNESCAP Time/Cost-Distance ModelUNESCAP Time/Cost-Distance Model

Page 8: African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation

The Trade Issues – Non-tariff Barriers Lack of uniform procedures / processes -

inconsistency Lack of standard documentation Lack of trading capacity / experience Customs delays Bureaucracy Few economies of scale Phyto-sanitary requirements Market access (tariff and non-tariff)

Page 9: African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation

Copyright © WCO-OMD 2010 9

CB Committee: Special emphasis on the Millennium Development Goals (keynote speech by Helen Clark, UNDP)

> Customs reform and modernization is a major driver of sustainable development and a key part of efforts to improve economic development and reduce poverty

I. The WCO approach to Capacity Building

Page 10: African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation

The Solutions Regional integration Harmonised legislation Institutional strengthening Trade / maritime Corridors – fed by, and feeding, efficient

ports Information support networks / Trade partnerships /

Innovation Trusted Trader regimes (competitive advantage?) One Stop Border Posts / Collaborative Border Management Holistic capacity building programmes Intermodal Transport Infrastructure Investment – private

sector engagement / PPPs / stakeholder co-operation Reduce bureaucracy – IT / Single Window Environment

Page 11: African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation

Corridor :Corridor :Walvis Bay – Lusaka Walvis Bay – Lusaka

Landlocked country:Landlocked country: ZambiaZambia

Transit country:Transit country: Namibia Namibia

Clusters locations:Clusters locations:Walvis Bay PortWalvis Bay PortBorder areaBorder areaLusaka Lusaka

Regional Counterpart: Regional Counterpart: Walvis Bay Corridor GroupWalvis Bay Corridor Group

‘A Model corridor’ UNCTAD

Page 12: African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation

Transport ExampleThe new…..

Transport policy reform Increase financial transparency, accountability

and viability Enterprise autonomy Resource cost-effectiveness Logistic planning / return loads Enhanced transport service delivery

Page 13: African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation

The Transport Challenge!

“The challenge is to develop a deregulated and privatised multi‐modal transportation and logistics system responsive to the trader’s and economy's needs and user expectations.”

Page 14: African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation

Also, let’s exploit:

ICT / Single Window Concept Trade / maritime Corridors Beneficial contracting Collaborative border management Customs modernisation – ‘facilitate legitimate trade’ Transport liberalisation, and

A holistic approach to trade facilitation and subsequent increased competitiveness

Page 15: African Ports and Maritime Conference Swakopmund 2011 Trade Facilitation and Intra-African Trade Jon Walden Senior Adviser Customs and Trade Facilitation

THANK YOU

www.crownagents.com/customs

[email protected]

Crown Agents Customs and Trade Facilitation