New opportunity from RCEP

The recently signed Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) includes 10 ASEAN member countries and five countries with which ASEAN has signed Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) namelyAustralia, China, Japan, the Republic of Korea and New Zealand.

RCEP is expected to open up a potential market for tropical agricultural products and processed foods. (Illustrative image/Hai Anh)
RCEP is expected to open up a potential market for tropical agricultural products and processed foods. (Illustrative image/Hai Anh)

The agreement will take effect after being ratified by the member countries, creating a market of 2.2 billion consumers, accounting for about 30% of global GDP and becoming the largest free trade region in the world.

Regarding Vietnam's agriculture sector, RCEP is expected to open up a sizeable new market for tropical agricultural products and processed foods.

Vietnam has long been exporting to the ASEAN market many agricultural products such as rice, coffee, pepper, vegetables, and seafood, ASEAN being the second largest consumer market for Vietnamese fruit and vegetables.

In addition, RCEP will bring about many advantages for boosting the export of Vietnamese agricultural, forestry and aquatic products thanks to the simplification ofimport and export procedures, helping reduce time and costs for businesses while increasing profit margins and competitiveness in the RCEP market.

Notably, the rule of origin in the RCEP is considered a great advantage for Vietnamese agricultural products. Specifically, the RCEP sets out consistent rules of origin in the region, which will eliminate the need to reference many FTAs and adjust different procedures for countries in RCEP regarding the same type of good.

Compared with regulations on certification of origin of goods to enjoy preferential treatment under the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) and the EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA), the rules of origin in RCEP are relatively easy for Vietnamese enterprises in general and for agricultural enterprises in particular.

However, RCEP also poses challenges for the agricultural sector if the sector wants to take full advantage of the agreement. Similar products from different countries in RCEP will face greater competition pressure. On the other hand, when the agreement comes into effect, Vietnam will also become a large import market of agricultural products from other countries in the RCEP, thus Vietnamese businesses will surely face fierce competition in their "home field" in the fight to dominate the domestic market.

There is not much time left before the coming into force of the RCEP, thus Vietnam needs to be attentive and proactive in order to seize the advantages from theagreement while overcoming its weaknesses.

Agricultural enterprises should learn and research more carefully about the market to develop a suitable export product structure. At the same time, they need to continuously improve product quality to achieve superior quality compared to the same products of other countries in order to attract customers while collecting relevantcertifications of the standards and quality requirements of RCEP.

Thus, the agreement is expected to form a large and stable consumption channel for Vietnamese agricultural products, contributing to help establish a firm position for the entire Vietnamese agricultural industry in the world market.