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The future of the EU-Japan Free Trade Agreement Erik Jonnaert, Secretary General ACEA European Economic and Social Committee 15 January 2014
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EU-Japan Auto Trade Figures JAPANHS 8703, excl. 870310 and 870390Annual % chgJan-Sep % chg EUROSTAT20102011201212/112012201313/12 in unitsImports from JP 604,151429,803392,625-9%307,497250,270-19% in unitsExports to JP 148,082175,242206,71418%153,155172,55613% in euroImports from JP 7,671,883,3306,503,578,0505,975,355,530-8%4,615,022,1103,872,724,350-16% in euroExports to JP 3,843,380,2705,088,515,5606,304,082,59024%4,739,832,4404,597,777,410-3% source: eurostat
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EU-Japan Auto Trade Figures
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Potential risks of an EU – Japan FTA for the EU automobile sector Findings of the Deloitte study of 2012 : The elimination of the EU tariff of 10% would represent an average additional profit of €1,500 per vehicle imported from Japan to the EU. This financial windfall would significantly enhance the competitiveness of Japanese players in the EU. Combined with a depreciation of the Yen versus the Euro, this poses significant challenges to the growth and sustainability of the local auto industry in the EU. The impact on EU employment could be significant, estimated at between 34,500 – 72,760 job losses in the sector.
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ACEA Objectives for the FTA Balanced FTA that creates a level playing field for European exporters To reduce the negative impact of the FTA as much as possible by NTB dismantling so that market access to Japan to become a reality Procedure to avoid new NTBs Strict parallelism between tariff elimination by the EU and NTB dismantling by Japan
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ACEA Requests for the FTA Japanese NTBs identified in the Scoping Exercise to be eliminated. ACEA’s Priorities for the FTA: 1. Harmonization with UNECE requirements: Any vehicle certificated for use in the EU in accordance with UN Regulations should be accepted in Japan without the need for modification or further testing. 2. Creating a level playing field with kei cars: European compact cars should be able to compete on equal terms in the 40% of the Japanese market taken by so-called kei-cars, sub-compact cars unique to Japan, protected by fiscal and other regulatory privileges.
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Next Steps Review of progress in April 2014 –The Commission will carry out a review of progress in eliminating NTBs, particularly in the automotive sector, 12 months after the start of the negotiations Status of progress –From ACEA’s perspective, progress has been mixed. –Japan’s adoption of UN Regulations to achieve technical harmonisation remains unsatisfactory –The decision to raise Kei-Car Tax from April 2015 is a step in the right direction
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