|
#15
Bangkok Post
May 13, 2003
Rivalry dies hard between Russia and old client states
Efforts to `co-operate' fail. Competing to enter the WTO is a much better bet.
BY ANDERS ASLUND
Anders Aslund is a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace.
Ever since the Soviet Union collapsed, the independent states that emerged
from the wreckage have tried to sort out their trade relations. But the flow of
goods between countries continues to contract even more than it should. What is
needed is free trade.
The twelve members of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) concluded
an Agreement on a Free Trade Zone in 1994, but it does not work. Whenever one
member is successful in exporting to another, the importing member soon imposes
quotas or prohibitive tariffs, impeding economic development.
The simple solution is a mechanism for conflict resolution. The World Trade
Organisation (WTO) has a well-functioning arbitration court with accepted
penalties that could be used, but only four CIS countries (Kyrgyzstan, Georgia,
Moldova, and Armenia) have joined the WTO. The l largest CIS economies _Russia,
Ukraine, and Kazakhstan _should hurry up and join as well. Alas, instead of
adapting tried and tested mechanisms, various CIS countries invent ever more
complex schemes, such as the five-state Customs Union, which was renamed the
Eurasian Economic Community last year, when its failure became evident.
The latest invention is the recent declaration by the Presidents of Russia,
Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine to start negotiations on forming a ``Unified
Economic Space.'' Three ideas are contained in this nebulous term: a customs
union, coordination of accession to the WTO, and a currency union. None of these
will benefit any participant.
A CIS customs union failed already, and will fail again in the future. It
delivered no freer trade than the CIS free-trade zone. No participant harmonised
its customs with anybody else. Russia refuses truly to accept the sovereignty of
the other CIS states, and instead wants only to impose its own customs policy,
which the others do not accept. Now the four presidents propose an independent
supranational commission for trade and tariffs in order to forge a common
customs policy. But there is no reason to believe that this will work any
better.
Simply put, these countries have different foreign-trade interests. A country
that does not produce a product has no interest in its protection, while
countries that do have protectionist interests. For instance, Russia's
automotive and aviation industries insist on high import tariffs, while
Kazakhstan produces neither cars nor airplanes. Russia's high import tariffs on
cars would impose an unjustified consumer tax on Kazakhs.
Until Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan accede to the WTO, the trade situation
within the CIS will not improve.
If they would stop ``cooperating'' and start competing to be the first to
enter the WTO, all three countries could be members within a year.
The worst idea is the currency union. All twelve CIS countries had a currency
union in 1992 and 1993. It was an unmitigated disaster that ended in
hyperinflation.
The fundamental problem was that each country had a central bank that issued
rouble credits, because no country was prepared to accept central-effectively
Russian-control over its monetary policy..
For the last three years, Russia, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine have been
economically successful, with Russia and Ukraine boosting average annual
economic growth rates of 6% and Kazakhstan around 11%.
Sound market-based thinking has driven their domestic economic policies.
None of them can afford to fool around with economic nonsense in their trade
policy.
|