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REGIONAL COOPERATION AND ECONOMIC INTEGRATION

REGIONAL COOPERATION AND ECONOMIC INTEGRATION

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The discussion elaborated above will mean than in classical concept of foreign trade<br />

statistics most of the mentioned activities will be recorded in foreign trade statistics of a<br />

host country of a foreign affiliated. But new approach in gathering statistics on international<br />

trade will record all the mentioned activities to a foreign trade statistics of a home country<br />

of a parent company which is in this example ultimate controlling authority. New concept<br />

of international trade defines export of a country not only as its direct export but it also<br />

includes the foreign sales of the affiliates of parent companies of that country in the host<br />

country and all other countries. But this export, under new concept, does not include export<br />

that foreign affiliates of outside parent companies have made from the observed country.<br />

Due to this unprecedented role of transnational companies in international trade we can<br />

conclude that traditional official foreign trade statistics can not provide us with a needed<br />

data for a quality analysis of international trade flows. That is why new statistical framework<br />

is being set up having in focus the activities of foreign affiliates in international trade.<br />

4. Foreign affiliates trade statistics (FATS)<br />

SOME ASPECTS OF TRADE STATISTICS <strong>AND</strong> REPORTING<br />

Some new approaches try to minimize the effects of distortions in gathering of statistical<br />

data on international trade transactions caused by TNCs. The main tool is the new concept<br />

of the international trade statistics which is known as Foreign Affiliate Trade Statistics<br />

(FATS). The key to a better, comprehensive picture of the world economy and world trade<br />

is to capture the flows between parent companies and foreign affiliates. This can only<br />

be achieved through an expanded collection of data of foreign direct investments and<br />

associated financing arrangements, that is activities of transnational companies and their<br />

foreign affiliates.<br />

Interest in FATS has arisen from two primary reasons: GATS and globalization. Entering<br />

into force on January 1, 1995, the WTO General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) is<br />

the first set of multilaterally negotiated and legally enforceable rules covering international<br />

trade in commercial services (excluding government services). According to GATS,<br />

international trade in services can take place through four modes of supply:<br />

-<br />

-<br />

-<br />

-<br />

mode 1 – cross-border supply, in which only the service crosses the border,<br />

mode 2 – consumption abroad, occurs when consumers consume services while<br />

outside their country,<br />

mode 3 – commercial presence, in which the service supplier establishes its commercial<br />

presence in another country,<br />

mode 4 – presence of natural persons, when an individual has moved temporarily into<br />

the territory of the consumer to provide a service.<br />

For FATS the most important flow of international trade in services is mode 3 – commercial<br />

presence. The important step in building more comprehensive statistics has been the<br />

publishing of Manual on Statistics of International Trade in Services (MSITS), which has<br />

been a joint product of the United Nations, European Commission, IMF, OECD, UNCTAD<br />

and WTO. According to MSITS, by applying a simplified approach to the statistical<br />

treatment of GATS modes of supply in order to facilitate the compilation of statistics by<br />

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