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  • Client: Asian Development Bank (ADB)
  • Country: Indonesia, Malaysia
  • Region: BIMP-EAGA Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area, ASEAN
  • Year: 2019

This pre-feasibility study develops a practical and implementable program to develop the Sarawak (Malaysia)–West Kalimantan (Indonesia) border area (within a broad geographic context), based on specific industry value chains. It identifies concrete and high-impact projects that will advance implementation of an integrated border area development program for West Kalimantan. It maps the optimal configuration of Sarawak–West Kalimantan cross-border trade and investment in goods and services; and, concurrently, provides the design of a border area development plan for the two territories. As a pre-feasibility study, we examine a wide range of industry options and determine which projects are economically viable within the socioeconomic, institutional, and political context of Sarawak and West Kalimantan. We follow the same analytical approach as that for the pilot project study of North Kalimantan and Sabah, which serves as a high-profile demonstration pre-feasibility study for this and other border area development programs.

  • Client: Asian Development Bank (ADB)
  • Country: Thailand, Malaysia
  • Region: IMT-GT, Asia and Pacific
  • Year: 2019

This report updates a scoping study that was carried out by the Asian Development Bank (ADB) in 2014 on the development of a border economic area between Malaysia and Thailand. Following that report, the two governments decided to initially focus on the border economic area (BEA) in the Malaysian state of Kadah and the Thai province of Songkhla since it handles the largest volume of cross-border movement of goods and people.

The present report updates development since 2014 in that area.The project builds on the IMT-GT connectivity corridors that serve as the channel through which development is to disseminate to areas throughout the sub-region. Impact of economic area along Malaysia-Thailand border is expected to link to Indonesia through connectivity to other corridors and serve as a sub-regional-level model for IMT-GT.

For a video on the project, see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BpgpN8Y2dYk&feature=youtu.be.

  • Client: Asian Development Bank (ADB)
  • Country: Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines
  • Region: BIMP-EAGA Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area, ASEAN
  • Year: 2017

This study examines potential investment opportunities for cross-border value chains in the economic corridors of the Brunei Darussalam-Indonesia-Malaysia-Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area (BIMP-EAGA).

It offers an investment perspective that is grounded on extensive interviews with company representatives and public sector officials. Qualitative and quantitative-based surveys were conducted over a six-week period by the study team that interviewed 70 companies distributed over 20 industry classifications or divisions in six BIMP-EAGA corridor states and provinces. The surveys were carried out through one-on-one interviews with company representatives and the results were used to rate not only investment opportunities in different industries, but also soft and hard infrastructural conditions that affect the investment climate.

  • Client: Asian Development Bank (ADB)
  • Country: Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines
  • Region: BIMP-EAGA Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area
  • Year: 2017

This study examines the investment climate impacting on decisions to invest in the economic corridors of the Brunei Darussalam-Indonesia-Malaysia-Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area (BIMP-EAGA). The key factors identified by businesses as impacting on their investment decisions in BIMP-EAGA’s corridors are complementarities in cross-border production activities and services, investment incentives, hard and soft infrastructure, the regulatory environment, governance, and other issues affecting cross-border investments.

  • Client: Chulalongkorn University
  • Country: Thailand, Malaysia
  • Region: IMT-GT, Asia and Pacific
  • Year: 2016

This monograph deals with the emergence and characteristics of special border zones in Thailand and how they are able to deal with the range of situations that exist along the country’s borders. It brings together practical tools and experiences surrounding Thailand’s border area development. Its emphasis is on new directions being adopted to drive economic growth and social development in those regions that could otherwise lag behind the rapid growth of agglomerations near major international gateways.

It provides the basic tools and methodologies required to adequately evaluate and plan the location, coverage, incentives and financing for border development areas. In so doing, it emphasizes practical issues needed to implement special border development zones in ways that ensure that the choice of projects, programs and institutions designated for the border areas are based on international best practices.

It covers special border zones at three levels: first, it describes their characteristics in terms of common features and operational components; second, it covers the overall strategic approach to their design and adaption to specific area requirements; and, third, it provides details on practical steps involved in their implementation and operationalization.

  • Client: Asian Development Bank (ADB)
  • Country: Thailand, Malaysia
  • Region: IMT-GT, Asia and Pacific
  • Year: 2014

The report provides a review and analysis of the findings from the scoping study on the proposed Malaysian–Thailand Special Border Economic Zone (SBEZ). The coverage of the study is guided by the recommendations of the IMT-GT Special Implementation Task Force on the Establishment of a Special Border Economic Zone (hereafter TF-SBEZ) at its meeting in Penang, Malaysia on 22 November 2013. At that time, the TF-SBEZ determined that that present study should be a stand-alone study, comprehensive in nature and cover in-depth all the SBEZ components for each of the eight border crossing areas in the Thai-Malaysian border, including linkages to Indonesia.

Based on those findings, the TF-SBEZ requested that the present study make recommendations to the Task Force on the possible location(s) of the SBEZ. The study is part of a broader project that intends to support the establishment of an SBEZ that will help to attract investors in productive activities that promote subregional value chains in order to stimulate cross-border trade and investment, serve as a catalyst to commerce along the IMT-GT corridors and help to substantially improve the social and economic welfare of the population along the border provinces.

  • Client: ASEAN Secretariat
  • Country: Brunei, Burma Myanmar, Cambodia, Timor-Leste, Indonesia, Laos, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam
  • Region: ASEAN
  • Year: 2008

The objective of this study is to provide a preliminary analysis on a range of CET options that could be adopted by ASEAN and to quantitatively assess their implications for each ASEAN member state and the region as a whole. The results of the study are intended to assist the ASEAN Secretariat and the ASEAN member states in considering options under deliberations by the CCCA, which will eventually be presented to the Senior Economic Officials Meeting (SEOM) for its deliberation on the application of a CET as a long term objective of economic integration in ASEAN.

We compare the welfare effects of ASEAN FTAs relative to pre-CET and post-CET rates. While the static effects are unlikely to be large since, in the end, the final trade-weighted average tariff is the same, the dynamic effects could be significant and give rise to questions about revenue compensations prior to joining new FTAs. The welfare effects of the two sequencing paths can vary considerably. Implementation of a customs union and an FTA can also move forward simultaneously since the implementation of a customs union may be phased and FTA negotiations initiated during that time. In those cases, the existence of customs union commitments by the ASEAN member states can be considered as preceding the FTA, even though the customs union commitments are not fully implemented.

  • Client: Asian Development Bank (ADB)
  • Country: Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines
  • Region: BIMP-EAGA Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area, ASEAN
  • Year: 2003

Brunei Darussalam-Indonesia-Malaysia-Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area (BIMP-EAGA) sub-regional trade agreement growth area strategy on trade, agro-business, transport and trade to identify leading sectors and industries to promote exports and investment-oriented activities in specific geographic regions of each country, including analysis of growth markets with and outside region

  • Client: Inter-American Development Bank
  • Country: Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines
  • Region: BIMP-EAGA Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area, ASEAN
  • Year: 1997

In Brunei-Darussalam, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines - East Asean Growth Area. Vol. II. Manila: Asian Development Bank, 1997.

  • Client: Asian Development Bank (ADB)
  • Country: Brunei, Burma Myanmar, Cambodia, Timor-Leste, Indonesia, Laos, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam
  • Region: BIMP-EAGA Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area, ASEAN
  • Year: 1995

Brunei Darussalam-Indonesia-Malaysia-Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area (BIMP-EAGA) Sub-regional trade agreement growth area strategy to promote exports and investment-oriented activities in specific geographic regions of each country, covering trade, finance, agro-industry, logistics and transport facilitation in the context of five designated economic corridors