THE NATION
April 29, 2013
Thailand and Cambodia have agreed to drive
bilateral trade up by 30 per cent a year, following an agreement to
establish a special rice-trade zone.
After the fourth Joint Trade Commission (JTC) recently, Commerce
Minister Boonsong Teriyapirom said that Thailand and Cambodia had the
potential to drive two-way trade up by 30 per cent, due to strong growth
in 2012.
Last year, bilateral trade grew by 40.5 per cent year on year, from
US$2.86 billion (Bt84 billion) in 2011 to $4.03 billion in 2012. To
drive growth, the two countries
will also strengthen cooperation on trade and investment in other sectors, ready for the opening of the Asean Economic Community in 2015.
Made up of five Asean member
states, the rice trade zone will include Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam, in
addition to Thailand and Cambodia. It is hoped that the special trade
zone will ensure global food security throughout the Asean region as well as stabilise the price of rice on the world market.
Three working committees will be set up among the five countries. The
first committee will comprise high level officials and ministers of the
so-called Asean 5. The second committee will be made up of senior officials of the Asean Rice
Cooperation Committee, which will work closely with the private rice
traders of each country, hailing from organisations like Asean Rice Miller and the Trader Federation.
Thailand will also expand crop cooperation to include the cultivation
of cassava, thus raising the incomes of farmers in the region. In
addition, it will help Cambodia promote its cassava production under the
same trade zone concept. This is expected to encourage more trading of
cereals, by promoting contract farming and providing stable incomes for
farmers.
Moreover, under an initiative called the Greater mekong Sub-region
Cross-Border Transport Agreement, the two nations will provide public
transport between the border town of Aranyaprathet and Cambodia's
Poipet. It is hoped the move will lead to a growth in logistics and
trade between the two countries and improve immigration procedures for
travellers, including an electronic passport identification system.
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