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Brunei's Challenge Is To Shed
Dependency On Oil & Gas: Report
By Azlan Othman
Bandar Seri
Begawan - The slow progress of the private sector, lack of
transparency and public accountability and modest economic growth
insufficient to generate enough jobs for the growing labour force
were highlighted at the recent World Trade Organisation (WTO)
Secretariat report on trade policies and practices in Brunei.
It said the country owes its
prosperity to its abundant oil and gas resources. This leaves Brunei
vulnerable to external shocks, particularly given the prospect of an
eventual depletion of these resources.
The report stated that the major
challenge for Brunei is to create sustained growth in the non-oil
private sector while reducing the role of the government, as well as
intensify the economic diversification programme.
Despite the provision of investment
incentives, the private sector in Brunei remains small and weak, it
added.
It also highlighted that foreign
investment policies, while encouraging investment in all sectors,
are unclear about limits on foreign equity holdings and the sectors
in which investment is restricted, thereby providing scope for
discretion in government decision making.
The report also said Brunei has
made significant improvements to its regulatory framework in several
trade areas notably trade related aspects of intellectual property
rights (TRIPS), customs procedures, telecommunications and standards
since the previous review.
Brunei has intensified its
participation in regional trade agreements and has reduced tariffs
to low levels although there is still a large gap between applied
and bound Most Favoured Nation (MFN) rates.
With respect to trade and
investment policy framework, the report also noted a number of
changes and revisions, partly relating to the WTO provisions, which
have been made to national laws, with respect to intellectual
property rights, customs and excise and the recent regional and
bilateral agreements and investment, including FDI.
However, it highlighted the lack of
data in several key areas and activities which continue to be an
impediment to both the formulation and effective evaluation of trade
and trade-related policies and measures.
The report also noted that Brunei
has intensified its participation in regional and bilateral trade
agreements in Asean, BIMP-EAGA and Apec.
In Asean, Brunei has reduced
tariffs on 93 per cent of tariff lines to five per cent or zero for
products of Asean origin.
Brunei has also increased activity
on the bilateral front such as signing trade and investment
framework agreement (TIFA) between Brunei and United States in 2002,
Brunei-Japan economic partnership agreement in 2007.
On trade policies and practices,
the report stated that Brunei is committed to applying MFN treatment
to products coming from all the WTO members. Brunei's applied MFN
tariffs are low, averaging 4.8 per cent in 2007, zero for
agriculture and 5.4 per cent for nonagricultural products, ranging
from 0 to 30 per cent.
Almost 99 per cent of tariffs are
subject to 'ad valorem' (according to value) rates, while 131 carry
specific rates of duty, which apply mainly to matches, cigarettes,
coffee, tea and oil and lubricants.
Brunei has continued to reduce its
already low tariff rates under Asean, as well as more recent
preferential, agreements, although imports of a few products are
still subject to non-tariff restrictions, the report added. -- Courtesy of Borneo
Bulletin
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