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TRADE AND INVESTMENT TIES WITH EUROPE
Address by the Hon Tim Fischer, MP, Deputy Prime Minister
and Minister for Trade, to the Australian Business in Europe
Meeting, Sydney, 21 June 1996
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I am very pleased to have this opportunity to address this
Australian Business in Europe luncheon today. I am
especially pleased to be able to convey to you, first hand,
the Coalition Government's commitment to strengthening and
deepening Australia's relations with Europe, and our trade
and investment links in particular.
This is an objective we made clear in our policy statements
prior to the March Federal election. Our commitment has been
given real substance and momentum over the past month with
the successful visit to Australia of the Vice-President of
the European Commission, Sir Leon Brittan, and the launch of
a major study by my Department into the Australia-EU Trade
and Investment relationship.
The Government is also preparing a comprehensive new
platform for further development of the relationship through
negotiations towards a Framework Trade and Cooperation
Agreement with the European Commission and an accompanying
Joint Political Declaration between Australia and the
European Union. Both of these should be concluded by the end
of this year.
The Framework Agreement will provide a formal basis for
trade and economic cooperation in a wide range of areas. The
Joint Political Declaration will set out a framework for
dialogue and cooperation on international political issues.
As well as boosting cooperation generally, the two documents
will provide an early warning system to address potential
trade concerns. They should also give Australia a
constructive context in which to pursue the special
interests we have with the EU, including the concerns we
have on agricultural trade and market access issues.
Agriculture
Let me begin today by making some comments about Australia's
special interest in the European Union's agricultural
policy.
In this context, I would like to take this opportunity to
launch a new paper produced by my Department entitled
EU Agricultural Policy Towards 2000: An Australian
Perspective.
For Australia, the agriculture sector continues to be a
major priority in its relations with the European Union and
its Member States.
The EU made a significant breakthrough in reinstrumenting
and reforming aspects of its Common Agricultural Policy in
its 1992 reform package. Those reforms were critical to
ensuring a successful outcome for the Uruguay Round of trade
negotiations that were completed in 1994.
But intervention in European and world markets by the EU
under the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) continues to have
a prominent, distorting effect on agriculture markets.
For Australia, the value of the trade involved is
substantial. In 1995, Australia exported $19 billion in
agricultural products, 10 per cent of which went to the EU.
Protection of European agriculture markets therefore has a
significant negative impact on Australia, and further reform
of the CAP will be critical to future bilateral, regional
and multilateral trade negotiations.
Now that the 1992 reforms have run their course, an
increasingly lively and substantial debate on the future of
the CAP is now brewing in Europe.
And as the United Kingdom's CAP Review Group noted in
1995,
The Common Agriculture Policy....has created a high-cost
agriculture so that European farmers cannot compete on world
markets without subsidy. It disadvantages Europe's consumers
and its food industry by obliging them to pay artificially
high prices for their food supplies...[And it] has
not halted the decline in rural employment.
The Towards 2000 Agriculture policy paper prepared by
my Department provides an Australian contribution to the
debate on the need for, and shape of, future reforms.
It identifies a range of factors which should impel the EU
to consider further substantial reform of the CAP over the
next few years. It argues that, politically and
economically, the EU is now much more able to rise to the
challenge of CAP reform than it may have been in the
past.
At the same time, we must remember that powerful forces have
vested interests in maintaining the EU's current subsidies
and protection. These forces cannot be underestimated.
The policy paper notes that a principal issue for Australian
agriculture continues to be the impact of the CAP on
Australian exports to third countries.
The Government has welcomed the fact that the EU is
currently not applying its export subsidies in a predatory
way. Nevertheless, the level and range of the EU's
agricultural subsidies continue to be part of an ongoing
global problem in world trade that will require further
attention in new multilateral negotiations under the
auspices of the WTO.
As an example of the problems the CAP creates for world
markets, we now face a situation where heavy subsidisation
by the EU of its starch industry has seen world markets for
wheat gluten undermined for competitive, non-subsidised
producers like Australia, while high tariff walls are
maintained for gluten into the EU market.
On top of this, we now have the extraordinary situation that
has emerged recently of the EU levying taxes on its grain
exports, which means EU producers now pay less than the
international price for their raw material, wheat.
The new Australian Government policy paper stakes a claim
for the EU to allow fairer access for Australian farm
exports which at present have a very low market penetration
in the EU.
Our case is developed as part of an effort to ensure
sustainable growth in two-way trade, given the "blow-out" in
Australia's trade deficit with the EU that has occurred over
the past five years. We also base our claims on the improved
access to the Australian market that is now enjoyed by EU
producers, and Australia's concern with current EU
negotiations towards a new generation of preferential
agreements.
Trade and Investment
Let me now turn to the trade and investment relationship
more generally.
The report I launched during Sir Leon Brittan's visit to
Australia last month - the "Australia-European Union
Trade and Investment: Towards 2000" - is the first
comprehensive study of its kind into Australia's trade and
investment relations with the EU.
The study recognises the importance of Australia's
increasing engagement in Asia and the Government's Asian
trade priorities. Australia's exports to Asia have grown
over the last decade from around 50 per cent of total
exports to some 60 per cent. This is a shift of historic
proportions and Asia's importance to Australia's economic
future cannot be under-estimated.
The Towards 2000 study does, however, provide a
timely reminder that Australia's trade and investment
interests are multidimensional and complex. And it notes
that there has been a tendency in both Australia and Europe
to under-value the Australia-EU commercial relationship.
The aggregate picture of the commercial relationship is very
impressive. The EU is Australia's largest source of foreign
investment, its largest destination for outwards investment,
its largest source of merchandise imports and its second
largest market for exports of goods and services.
What is perhaps more interesting is the growth in the
relationship, the prospects for growth and the linkages
between trade and investment, including the stake that
hundreds of European companies have in Australia and in
Australia's success in the region.
The use of Australia by European companies as a base for
operations in the region - whether it be for export,
regional headquarters or for research and development - is
quite striking.
This was, I think, one of the key messages Sir Leon Brittan
took back to Europe. Like the European companies that have
invested in Australia, Sir Leon appreciated that Australia's
engagement with Asia makes us a more important and appealing
partner for Europe business.
Some of the most remarkable conclusions in the study relate
to the level of economic activity being generated by the
two-way foreign investment relationship.
The extraordinary growth in Australian foreign direct
investment in the EU since the mid-1980s - from around $A3
billion in mid-1985 to over $A23 billion in mid-1995 - has
added an important new dimension to the Australia-EU
relationship.
That growth compares favourably with the growth of our
investment relationship with Asia. It also reflects the
strong internationalisation of the Australian economy over
the last decade. Investment has become a significant factor
in the Australian economy, and Australia's stock of direct
foreign investment in the EU is about one and a half times
the global assets of our major company, BHP.
It is particularly instructive to look at the activities of
the Australian companies involved in these overseas
investments - the banks, insurance companies, media,
transport and distribution and so on. As the Towards
2000 study concludes, international investment has often
been the only way these companies can outgrow the limits of
the Australian market and become global players.
The study estimates that the value of the sales being
generated by Australian companies investing in the EU is
significantly greater than the value of Australia's exports
to the EU, or indeed of Australia's exports to South and
South East Asia.
Similarly, the sales generated by EU direct investment in
Australia substantially exceed annual EU exports of goods
and services to Australia.
On the trade side, the study reports a mixed story.
Good growth - and many success stories - are to be found in
the areas of manufactures and services, and especially in
Austrade-targetted sectors such as information technology,
fast ferries and the automotive sector. The EU is also an
important source of capital equipment and technology for
Australian industry.
But, overall, Australia's merchandise exports to the EU have
not performed well. As I mentioned earlier, over the last
five years, Australia's trade deficit with the EU has "blown
out". The Towards 2000 report examines the reasons
for this and concludes that both sides need to take action
to ensure that two-way trade growth continues to be
sustainable.
The main reason for Australia's poor export performance has
been slow economic growth in Europe over the first few years
of this decade and the European recession of 1992/93. Growth
prospects did pick up in 1994 and 1995. But more recently
they have flattened out again - especially in Germany and
France - and are not looking promising in the short
term.
This cyclical situation is exacerbated by structural
problems in Europe, particularly in industries that import
Australia's raw materials. It is therefore difficult to see
any substantial demand-led growth in our major exports to
Europe over the next year or so, unless European growth
rates pick up again.
By comparison, Asia's relatively strong economic growth,
together with the more favourable transport situation for
our trade with Asia, mean that we are likely to see
continued strong growth in Australia's exports there.
Nevertheless, Europe is a massive market and one
which Australian exporters should not neglect. Prospects for
our manufactured exports and services continue to be good
and warrant continuing support by Austrade, Chambers of
Commerce and groups like ABIE.
One of the challenges identified in the Towards 2000
study is for the Australian Government to ensure continued
improvement in the international competitiveness of the
Australian business environment. This challenge has become
increasingly significant given the recent strengthening of
the Australian dollar which, of course, works against
Australia's export competitiveness.
I was pleased to be in a position to advise Sir Leon, during
his visit, of the Coalition Government's commitment to
re-invigorating microeconomic reform in Australia,
particularly on the waterfront, in the labour market and in
key sectors like telecommunications.
This commitment, together with the improving access to the
Australian market being enjoyed by EU exporters as a result
of Australia's unilateral tariff cuts since 1988, gives
legitimacy to the challenges issued in the Towards
2000 study to the European Union. That is, that the
European Union should work to match the APEC developed
countries' commitment to establish free trade by the year
2010 and, in the meantime, provide fairer access to
Australia's exports of agricultural products and coal to the
EU.
These were points that I raised with Sir Leon.
And while I got no real sense of optimism that the EU would
give Australia more favourable access outside the next round
of multilateral negotiations, we will continue to work on
these issues.
I was, however, very pleased with Sir Leon's response to my
interventions on two matters.
First, I was very pleased to hear Sir Leon reiterate his
commitment to an ambitious, balanced and comprehensive new
round of multilateral trade negotiations by 1999, and his
expressed hope that December's WTO Ministerial Meeting in
Singapore would launch the preparatory work for the new
round.
Secondly, I was encouraged by Sir Leon' response to the APEC
trade liberalisation challenge, when he acknowledged the
need for the EU to give "serious and sympathetic
consideration" to matching the commitment to trade
liberalisation given by APEC's developed countries. If APEC
can show the way forward and table genuine and ambitious
Individual Action Plans later this year, Sir Leon and the EU
will feel the pressure to come up with a "balanced and
comparable response".
Of course, it is unlikely that Sir Leon carries the whole of
the European Union with him on these points. But it is
heartening that he - and indeed other leaders in Europe -
are taking such positions.
I very much welcome Europe's strong leadership on these
issues and would like to acknowledge that on many
multilateral trade issues we are working constructively with
our European friends.
Overall, I think the Towards 2000 study makes a very
positive contribution to understanding the complexities of
the Australia-EU relationship.
It highlights the importance of the EU market for Australian
exporters. And it promotes the attractions of Australia as a
commercial partner in the Asia Pacific region and as a
destination for investment.
The study also underlines the importance of the Australia-EU
Trade and Cooperation Agreement and Joint Political
Declaration as vehicles for further development of the broad
relationship.
It poses challenges for business and for business
organisations in Australia and in Europe. On at least one of
those challenges, Australian Business in Europe can play a
significant role. That is, in developing better networks
between Australian/European business organisations and the
Australian Government.
Such networks - and particularly the ABIE network - can play
an important role in the development of our trade and
investment relations with the EU. The Towards 2000
study, for example, identifies the fact that some Australian
exporters and investors find the changing regulatory
environment in the EU more complex and difficult than that
of the business environment in Asia. Business-Government
networks, such as those generated by the ABIE, can be
especially helpful on issues like this.
Conclusion
As momentum for a new multilateral round builds and as the
preparatory work begins, it will be important that the EU,
the Australian Government and industry leaders work
constructively on the full range of issues I have discussed
today.
We must be active on trade, investment and, of course,
agricultural issues.
Both the Trade and Investment Study and the Agriculture
policy paper are intended as constructive contributions to
that dialogue.
Our diplomatic missions in Europe have been tasked to
promote the messages in these studies with government and
business leaders, and I would welcome any initiatives ABIE
can take to promote these messages in Europe.
I hope we can work together in addressing challenges and
generating opportunities for Australian business in
Europe.
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