Potential for more Europe exports


CAMBODIAN exporters ought to make further use of tariff-free entry to the European Union, particularly given loosened regulations governing rule of origin, EU officials said at a trade seminar yesterday.
Least Developed Countries such as the Kingdom could export to the EU duty and quota free, as long as the country manufactured 40 per cent of the product’s value, officials said. Prior to January 2011, the bar was higher, at 70 per cent.


“Using garments as an example, with the old regulations, it was only possible to import raw material, but now countries can import parts for the final product,” European Customs administration officer Marie Louise Willemsen said.

The changes had been implemented in order to simplify the regulations and make them “more development friendly,” she said.

As a Least Developed Country, Cambodia has benefited from the preferential scheme since March, 2001.

But since the January 1 change in regulations, the Kingdom’s exports to the EU had doubled on the same period last year, Delegation of the European Commission Chargé d’Affaires Rafael Dochao Moreno said.

“I would like to see Cambodian exports to the EU diversify, as well as more efforts by the Government of Cambodia towards trade facilitation to be made,” Moreno said.

He added that the high cost of transiting goods via neighbouring countries remained a major impediment.

Source: The Phnom Penh Post (http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2011080250795/Business/potential-for-more-europe-exports.html)

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