• GCC to complete customs union by 2015

    08/05/2011

    GCC to complete customs union by 2015
     
     


    GCC officials are pictured at the opening session of their meeting in Abu Dhabi on Saturday. They are, from left to right, Secretary-General Abdel Latif Al-Zayyani, UAE Minister of State for Financial Affairs Obaid Humaid Al-Tayer, Finance Ministers Ahmed bin Mohammed Al Khalifa of Bahrain, Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum of the UAE, Ibrahim Al-Assaf of Saudi Arabia, Yousef Kamal of Qatar, Mustafa Al-Shimali of Kuwait, and Darwish bin Ismail al-Balushi of Oman. (Reuters)
     
     
    GCC countries plan to resolve all outstanding issues about their customs union over the next three years in order to have it fully operational by 2015, a top UAE official said.
     
    “What we have agreed upon, that in the next three years, meaning 2011 to 2014, we should complete all the pending issues in regard to the customs union,” UAE Minister of State for Financial Affairs Obaid Humaid Al-Tayer told a news conference.
     
    “We hope...it becomes effective January 1, 2015,” he said after a Gulf finance ministers’ meeting in Abu Dhabi.
     
    The introduction of the customs union in 2003 had been hailed by officials as a major achievement countering criticism that the GCC bloc would be unable to realize economic integration in the world’s top oil exporting region. But differences have delayed an agreement on how to introduce a permanent system to distribute customs receipts among six GCC members.
     
    In March, a top GCC official said the pending issues need to be resolved to reach a final deal on the customs union in line with an agreed timetable this year.
     
    Customs duties were unified in 2003 at five percent and a common market in the Gulf, which seeks to emulate European economic integration, requires customs barriers to be removed.
     
    Last year, GCC officials said the UAE was unhappy with a quota of receipts proposed by the secretariat but some said that a bigger issue would be to scrap red tape at border crossings.
     
    Trucks transporting goods had been held up for days mainly at the border between Saudi Arabia and the UAE last year, casting doubts about the efficiency of the customs union plan.
     
    GCC officials see the current customs system as temporary as it is expensive to run.
     
    Tariffs are collected at the first entry point and the revenue is shared according to a final destination of the product.

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