Chapter 2
Background
Context
2.1
The People's Republic of China (China) and Australia have been
negotiating a free trade agreement for over a decade. China is Australia's
largest two-way trading partner, largest export destination and largest source
of merchandise imports.[1]
Australia and China have an extensive bilateral relationship and a joint
interest in the economic challenges and opportunities in the Asia-Pacific, such
as removing trade barriers and increasing jobs.
2.2
Australia has recently signed trade agreements with other major trade
partners in Asia. Australia signed the Japan-Australia Economic Partnership
Agreement (JAEPA) on 7 April 2014 and the Korea-Australia Free Trade
Agreement (KAFTA) on 8 April 2014. On 5 October 2015, 12 countries including
Australia, concluded the negotiation of the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement
(TPP). The other TPP countries were Brunei Darussalam, Canada, Chile,
Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, United States, and
Vietnam.[2]
2.3
Australia is continuing to negotiate a range of other trade agreements.
These include:
-
the Australia-India Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement;
-
the Indonesia-Australia Comprehensive Economic Partnership
Agreement;
-
the Pacific Agreement on Closer Economic Relations (PACER) Plus;
and
-
the Trade in Services Agreement.
Implementation of agreement
2.4
The agreement was signed by the Minister for Trade and Investment, the Hon Andrew
Robb AO MP, and the Chinese Commerce Minister, Mr Gao Hucheng, in
Canberra on 17 June 2015.
2.5
Australia and China have signalled they intend to complete their
domestic treaty processes, including passage of necessary implementing legislation,
towards the end of 2015. After these processes are complete both countries will
exchange written notifications, through diplomatic channels, certifying they
are ready to commence the Agreement. ChAFTA will enter into force 30 days after
this exchange of notes.
2.6
On 10 August 2015, Minister Robb wrote to the committee:
Please be advised that the Government is working towards
entry into force of ChAFTA this year, subject to the completion of domestic
processes by Australia and China. In view of this, legislative changes in
relation to ChAFTA will need to be introduced immediately after JSCOT tables
its report, which will necessarily be before the finalisation of the report by
the Senate Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade References Committee.[3]
2.7
On 21 October 2015, Minister Robb and the Minister for
Immigration and Border Protection, the Hon Peter Dutton MP, announced that
support had been secured from the Opposition to ensure the passage of the
implementing legislation for ChAFTA.[4]
Key aspects of agreement
2.8
ChAFTA is a free trade agreement comparable to Australia's other
agreements, such as with the United States and Korea. The full agreement
comprises 17 chapters with associated annexes, schedules and side letters.
Other key documents include the National Interest Analysis, the Regulation
Impact Statement and the Summary of Chapter Outcomes (extracted below).
2.9
Chapter 1 establishes the ChAFTA free trade area, consistent with World
Trade Organization (WTO) rules. It sets out ChAFTA's relationship to other
international agreements and provides general definitions to guide
interpretation of the Agreement.
2.10
Chapter 2, Trade in Goods, establishes rules for trade in goods between
the parties, and includes annexes setting out the agreed tariff elimination
schedules and the administration of country-specific agriculture tariff-rate
quotas and special agriculture safeguard mechanisms. It affirms a number of WTO
provisions that already govern trade in goods among the parties and, in some
cases, provides for more specific commitments, including a commitment not to
use export subsidies between Australia and China. The chapter establishes a
mechanism to address non-tariff measures on a case-by-case basis and the
Committee of the Chapter, comprising representatives of each party, will make
recommendations on further addressing non-tariff measures.
2.11
Chapter 3, the Rules of Origin, sets out the rules for determining
whether products of Australia or China will be eligible for preferential tariff
treatment under ChAFTA. It also establishes the procedures to claim
preferential tariff treatment. The chapter provides for certificates of origin
to be produced by 'authorised bodies'. It also provides for self-certification
in certain circumstances.
2.12
Chapter 4, Customs Procedures and Trade Facilitation, establishes rules
which provide greater predictability of customs procedures through, inter
alia, improving transparency. It also ensures the availability of a review
mechanism to address disputes. The Chapter obliges both parties to issue
advance rulings, giving greater certainty to business. It also reflects several
key provisions of the WTO Agreement on Trade Facilitation.
2.13
Chapter 5, Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) Measures, builds on
commitments under the WTO Agreement on the Application of SPS Measures. It
provides for cooperation and mutual technical assistance and capacity building,
and supports work on equivalence, inspection and approval procedures. It
establishes a Sub-Committee on SPS Cooperation. This chapter, and its
sub-committee, is not designed to supplant the work of the existing
Australia-China SPS High Level Dialogue on which the Department of Agriculture
has the lead. It provides an extra avenue and trigger point to address SPS
issues.
2.14
Chapter 6, Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT), builds on existing
commitments under the WTO Agreement on TBT. It includes provisions for enhanced
cooperation, information exchange and consultation between the parties and, on
Australia's side, non-government standards bodies. The chapter establishes a
Sub-Committee on TBT which will provide additional avenues for Australia to
address TBT issues with China and will set a framework for potential
cooperation projects.
2.15
Chapter 7, Trade Remedies, confirms business will continue to have full
access to trade remedies under the WTO, including anti-dumping and
countervailing measures. It also establishes a temporary bilateral safeguard
measure which may be applied if either an Australian or Chinese domestic
industry faces 'serious injury' due to a surge in imports following a reduction
in tariffs under ChAFTA.
2.16
Chapter 8, Trade in Services, includes modifications and additions to
commitments made in the WTO General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) that
extend the scope of commitments, subject regulators to enhanced disciplines,
and address behind the border barriers to trade in services. Such 'GATS-plus'
provisions were a priority for Australia. The chapter is structured to enable
both countries to make expansive market access commitments. A side letter on
education services builds on China's market access commitment to list
institutions on its study abroad website, improving the attractiveness of
Australian private higher education institutions to Chinese students.
2.17
Annex 8-B, Financial Services, provides for measures additional to
Chapter 8 in relation to financial services. China has undertaken comprehensive
treaty-level commitments on financial services, including agreement to
provisions on transparency, regulatory decision-making and streamlining of
financial services licences applications. A side letter on financial services
encourages greater cooperation and information-sharing on regulatory frameworks
for over-the-counter derivatives (securities) and payment systems, to better
manage risks and improve transparency.
2.18
Chapter 9, Investment, takes a two-stage approach to investment. Stage
one is a short form investment chapter that will apply on entry into force. It
includes basic market access provisions and establishes a committee on
investment and a forward work program. Australia has made its market access
commitments, including the higher Financial Investment Review Board screening
threshold, in stage one. Stage two, the forward work program, includes a
commitment to commence negotiations for a future comprehensive investment
chapter within three years of entry into force of the agreement. The short form
investment chapter commits both parties to non-discriminatory treatment of the
other party's investors and investments (national treatment). Australian and
Chinese investors will be able to enforce the national treatment commitments
through an Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) mechanism.
2.19
Chapter 10, Movement of Natural Persons, provides for coverage of
temporary entry of services suppliers and investors. China and Australia have
committed to expeditiously process applications for immigration formalities,
provide timely information on visa application progress, and ensure transparent
procedures and requirements relating to the movement of natural persons of the
other party. Both sides have made a commitment not to apply labour market
testing to the categories where they have made specific commitments.
2.20
Chapter 11, Intellectual Property (IP), is consistent with Australia's
current IP setting and includes a commitment to implement effective
intellectual property enforcement systems with a view to eliminating trade in
goods and services infringing intellectual property rights. This includes the
provision of criminal procedures and penalties in appropriate circumstances.
The chapter also includes commitments to continue to work to enhance IP
examination and registration systems, to provide border measures in relation to
counterfeit trademark or pirated copyright goods, and on the protection of
undisclosed information.
2.21
Chapter 12, Electronic Commerce, includes a commitment to maintain the
practice of not imposing customs duties on electronic transmissions between the
two countries (subject to the WTO Work Programme on Electronic Commerce). It
also includes a commitment to protect electronic commerce customers in a manner
at least equivalent to protections for consumers engaged in other forms of
commerce and provisions to promote cooperation in relation to online consumer
protection and the regulation of unsolicited commercial electronic messages
(spam).
2.22
Chapter 13, Transparency, requires the prompt publication of all laws,
regulations, procedures and administrative rulings of general application in
respect of any matter covered by ChAFTA. The parties shall notify each other,
where possible, of any proposed or actual law, regulation, procedure or
administrative ruling of general application that might materially affect the
operation of ChAFTA or otherwise substantially affect the other party's
interests under ChAFTA.
2.23
Chapter 14, Institution Provisions, establishes a Joint Commission,
consisting of representatives of both parties, to be convened annually and
otherwise at a party's request. The Joint Commission will oversee
implementation and operation of ChAFTA, and supervise and coordinate the work
of all subsidiary bodies.
2.24
Chapter 15, Dispute Settlement, includes a binding State-to-State
dispute settlement mechanism modelled on previous free trade agreements and the
WTO system. Most substantive obligations in ChAFTA will be subject to this
mechanism except those in the chapters on Electronic Commerce; Sanitary and
Phytosanitary Measures; Technical Barriers to Trade; and the Movement of
Natural Persons chapter (save for disputes meeting certain criteria).
2.25
Chapter 16, General Provisions and Exceptions, sets out a number of
WTO-style general and security exceptions which apply to several chapters of
ChAFTA. The chapter provides that nothing in ChAFTA shall require a party to
furnish or allow access to confidential information that would impede law
enforcement, be contrary to the public interest or prejudice legitimate
commercial interests of public or private enterprises. The chapter also
references the importance of cooperation, particularly with respect to
competition and consumer welfare, and sets out the means by which such
cooperation should occur.
2.26
Under this chapter both parties shall review ChAFTA to further its
objectives within three years of entry into force and at least every five years
thereafter, unless otherwise agreed.
2.27
Chapter 17, Final Provisions, governs the way in which ChAFTA operates
as a treaty. It establishes the processes by which ChAFTA will enter into
force, how it may be amended and the conditions under which it may be
terminated.
2.28
Four side letters between Australia and China cover the areas of:
-
skills assessment processes for temporary skilled labour visas;
-
financial services;
-
education services; and
-
legal services.
Joint Standing Committee on Treaties (JSCOT)
2.29
JSCOT tabled its report into ChAFTA on 19 October 2015. The majority
report supported the treaty but noted that ChAFTA has 'proved more
controversial than previous agreements, particularly regarding the provisions
for labour'.[5]
2.30
The committee made
five recommendations:
-
that all government departments and agencies responsible for
curbing unlawful immigration activity, particularly the Department of
Immigration and Border Protection, are adequately resourced to carry out their
functions effectively and efficiently;
-
that Austrade is sufficiently resourced to support dedicated
officers, with the specific expertise required to provide information and
assistance to individual sectors to facilitate access to the Chinese market;
-
that the Department of Agriculture develop a set of performance
indicators to measure progress on the removal of non-tariff barriers; and the
Department of Agriculture and the relevant sections of the Department of
Foreign Affairs and Trade are adequately resourced to enable effective progress
to be made in removing non-tariff barriers;
-
that the Australian Government prioritise implementation of the
recommendations of the Review of the Tax Arrangements Applying to Collective
Investment Vehicles report and Australia as a Financial Centre — Building on
our Strengths (the Johnson Report) in order to achieve full utilisation of the
China Australia Free Trade Agreement for Australian financial services; and
-
that binding treaty action be taken.[6]
2.31
A dissenting report
was made by the Hon Kelvin Thompson MP, the Hon Melissa Parke MP, Senator Sue
Lines and Senator Glenn Sterle, which:
-
opposed inclusion of ISDS provisions in ChAFTA;
-
noted that the skills assessment processes in the ChAFTA side
letters had caused concern regarding their impact on workplace skills and
safety standards; and
-
called on the government to accept amendments to the Migration
Act 1958 (Migration Act) proposed by Labor as outlined below.
2.32
The dissenting report stated that amendments to the Migration Act would:
- require
employers nominating 457 visa workers under work agreements, including ChAFTA
IFAs, to meet labour market testing requirements (legislated labour
market testing requirements currently apply only to employers under the general
457 visa stream).
-
require
the Minister, before entering a work agreement with an employer, to be
satisfied that base pay rates for 457 workers will be greater than the Temporary
Skilled Migration Income Threshold.
-
require
the Minister, before entering a work agreement, to have regard to:
-
whether
the agreement will support or create Australian jobs (Australian jobs test);
-
a
labour market need statement provided by the employer demonstrating why
they need to utilise temporary skilled migration (writing into the Migration
Act requirements currently set out in Departmental guidelines for project-based
work agreements);
-
a
training plan adopted by the employer showing how they will improve the
skills of local workers (writing into the Migration Act requirements currently
set out in Departmental guidelines for the former Labor Government’s Enterprise
Migration Agreements and Meat Industry Labour Agreements);
-
whether
the 457 workers will be able to transfer skills to Australian workers;
-
an
overseas worker support plan showing how the employer will provide 457
visa workers with support and assistance during their stay in Australia,
including information about workplace entitlements and community services
(writing into the Migration Act requirements currently set out in Departmental
guidelines for Project Agreements).
-
provide
the Minister with power to impose additional safeguards on work
agreements to ensure that they have a positive impact on Australian jobs (such
as minimum numbers of Australian workers to be employed or a ceiling on the
number of overseas workers).
-
require
the Minister to publish a register of work agreements entered into and to
report annually to Parliament on the operation and impact of work agreements.
-
increase
the Temporary Skilled Migration Income Threshold (TSMIT) from $53,900 to
$57,000 (restoring two years of indexation increases not provided by the
Coalition Government) and index it to wages growth.
-
extend
the TSMIT from the general (standard business sponsor) 457 visa stream to 457
visas granted under work agreements, including ChAFTA Investment Facilitation
Arrangement (IFA) work agreements.
-
The
amendments would give the Minister the power to exempt an individual work
agreement or class of work agreements from the operation of this provision, in
order to retain flexibility in areas with special circumstances (such as
Designated Area Migration Agreements or Meat Industry Labour Agreements).
-
strengthen
enforcement of skills assessment and occupational licencing requirements
by creating new visa criteria and conditions for 457 visa workers in
occupations where it is mandatory to hold a licence, registration or membership
(such as electrical or plumbing occupations where workers must hold State and
Territory occupational licences).
-
A
new visa criterion will require visa applicants in these occupations either to
hold the relevant licence when they apply for a visa or to demonstrate that
they meet the requirements for obtaining a licence. This criterion will need to
be met for the Minister to grant a 457 visa.
-
New
visa conditions will require 457 visa holders in licenced occupations:
-
not
to perform the occupation before obtaining a licence;
-
to
obtain the licence within 60 days of arriving in Australia;
-
to
provide the Department with documentation showing they hold the licence, and
showing any conditions or requirements imposed on their licence, before they
perform the occupation; to comply with any conditions on the licence;
-
not
to engage in any work which is inconsistent with the licence or conditions
imposed on the licence;
-
to
notify the Department of any changes to their licence or the conditions imposed
on the licence.
-
These
new visa conditions will improve the Department’s ability to enforce
occupational licencing requirements and ensure 457 visa workers do not operate
as unlicensed workers in trades such aselectrical work;
-
Breaching
these visa conditions would provide the Department with grounds to cancel the workers’
visa and to impose sanctions on the nominating employer.[7]
2.33
The dissenting report recommended that ChAFTA not be ratified until
these legislative changes have been made.
2.34
Senator the Hon Joe Ludwig added additional comments to the report,
noting the importance of ratifying ChAFTA as soon as possible to allow business
and industry to access the full advantage of the agreement, but noting that
this should not be achieved at the 'expense of Australian jobs'. Senator Ludwig
stated '[t]he government should be prepared to accommodate legislated
safeguards that enable ChAFTA to enter into force this year and ensure the full
benefits of the agreement can be realised'.[8]
Proposed legislation
2.35
On 16 September 2015 the Government introduced the Customs Amendment
(China-Australia Free Trade Agreement Implementation) Bill 2015 (Customs bill)
and the Customs Tariff Amendment (China-Australia Free Trade Agreement
Implementation) Bill 2015 into the House of Representatives. The Explanatory
Memorandum for the Customs bill stated:
The purpose of the Customs Amendment (China-Australia Free
Trade Agreement Implementation ) Bill 2015 (the Bill) is to amend the Customs
Act 1901 (the Customs Act) to introduce new rules of origin for goods that
are imported into Australia from China to give effect to the China-Australia
Free Trade Agreement (the Agreement). The Customs Act amendments will enable
goods that satisfy the rules of origin to enter Australia at preferential rates
of customs duty.
Complementary amendments will also be made to the Customs
Tariff Act 1995 (the Customs Tariff Act) by the Customs Tariff Amendment
(China-Australia Free Trade Agreement Implementation) Bill 2015 to give effect
to the Agreement.[9]
2.36
On 17 September 2015, the provisions of the bills were referred by the
Senate to the Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Legislation Committee for
inquiry and report on the next working day after the tabling of the report of
the Senate Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade References Committee into the
Proposed China-Australia Free Trade Agreement.[10]
Agreed amendments
2.37
On 21 October 2015, it was announced that the Opposition would support the
passage of ChAFTA's implementing legislation as an agreement had been reached with
Government which would implement safeguards into the Migration Regulations, making
them legally binding. These safeguards will:
-
require labour market testing for all work agreements;
-
require 'market salary rate' for standard 457 visas to use
enterprise agreement rates, where they exist, as the salary benchmark; and
-
implement more stringent visa conditions for 457 visa workers in
trade occupations.[11]
2.38
During debate of the implementation legislation for ChAFTA in the House
of Representatives on 21 October 2015, the Opposition Leader, the Hon Bill
Shorten MP described these safeguards as follows:
Labor's safeguards include amendments to the migration
regulations which will require employers under work agreements to carry out
labour market testing. This will require advertising for jobs for local workers
before turning to 457 workers. Labor has also secured improvements in the
immigration department guidelines which will require employers who enter work
agreements to: provide a labour market needs analysis showing there is a
genuine need to use overseas workers; implement a training plan to tackle
skills shortages by training local workers; and adopt an overseas worker
support plan to provide their 457 workers with information about their
workplace rights, entitlements and other support services. Our safeguards also
give the immigration minister the ability to require a minimum number of local
workers to be employed on these projects, or to impose ceilings on the number
of overseas workers.
...we have also secured amendments to the migration regulations
to improve the market salary rate requirement for 457 visa workers. The market
salary rate requirement is designed to ensure that temporary skilled migration
does not undermine Australian wages and conditions. Labor's amendment to the
regulation will strengthen this requirement by using enterprise agreements as
the benchmark for assessing whether market salaries being paid...Labor has also
secured agreement from the government to review the temporary skilled migration
income threshold. This threshold is a safeguard designed to ensure that the
temporary migration system is used for genuinely skilled jobs; not for
entry-level positions, or relatively less skilled work. The review will
consider the level of the threshold, and whether it should be indexed in line
with wages growth, or possibly inflation, as another measure...
Labor has secured new visa conditions to ensure that 457 visa
holders in trades occupations have the necessary skills and qualifications to
perform their work safely and to the appropriate quality standards expected of
Australian jurisdictions. Labor's new conditions for the 457 visa holders will
require them to not perform the occupation unless: they hold the relevant
licence; obtain the licence within 90 days of arriving in Australia; comply
with any conditions to which the licence is subject; not engage in any work
which is inconsistent with the licence; and notify the immigration department
in writing if the licence is refused, revoked, seized or cancelled. These new
safeguards for 457 visa holders in trades occupations will ensure that 457 visa
workers in licenced trades such as but not limited to electricians and
mechanics, obtain the necessary Australian licences and certifications. The
safeguards will ensure that federal immigration authorities have extra
information for monitoring and compliance of occupational licensing
requirements. And also, they will improve coordination between the federal
immigration department and the state and territory occupational skills and
workplace safety regulators. Non-compliance with these visa conditions would be
grounds for a 457 visa to be cancelled. Importantly, it would also provide
grounds for imposing sanctions on unscrupulous employers who engage overseas
trades workers on an unlicensed basis.[12]
2.39
Correspondence from Minister Robb to Senator Wong containing the details
of the agreement to ensure the passage of the legislation to implement ChAFTA
is attached at Appendix 2.[13]
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