Article of the Month -
November 2004
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Mutual Recognition of Surveying Qualifications within the
ASEAN Framework Agreement on Services
TEO Chee Hai, Malaysia
This paper has been for the first
time represented as a keynote presentation at the 3rd FIG Regional
Conference in Jakarta, Indonesia 6 October 2004. It does not necessarily
represent the position and views of the Ministry of International Trade and
Industry Malaysia, the Land Surveyors Board Peninsular Malaysia, The
Institution of Surveyors Malaysia nor the Association of Authorised Land
Surveyors Malaysia.
This article in .pdf-format.
Key words:
1. PREAMBLE
The surveying profession in Malaysia encompasses the profession of
- Land Surveying and Geomatics (including photogrammetry and remote
sensing, hydrographic surveying, land administration and geo
-informatics);
- Property Consultancy and Valuation Surveying (including property
management and estate agency);
- Quantity Surveying (including cost engineering and construction
economy); and
- Building Surveying (including building control).
2. INTRODUCTION
The Association represents the collective will of the nations of to bind
themselves together in friendship and cooperation and, through joint efforts
and sacrifices, secure for their peoples and for posterity the blessings of
peace, freedom, and prosperity. (The ASEAN Declaration, Bangkok, 8 August
1967)
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations or ASEAN was established on
8th August 1967 in Bangkok, Thailand by five original Member Countries,
namely, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand.
Negara Brunei Darussalam joined the Association on 8th January 1984,
Socialist Republic of Vietnam followed on 28th July 1995. Lao Peoples
Democratic Republic and Union of Myanmar joined on 23rd July 1997 with the
Kingdom of Cambodia joining the Association on 30th April 1999.
The ASEAN region has a population of about 500 million, a total land mass
of approximately 4.5 million square kilometers with a combined gross
domestic product of US$ 737 billion and a total trade of US$720 billion. The
ASEAN region is significant both in terms of population and as an economic
entity.
At the fifth ASEAN Summit in December 1995 in Bangkok, Thailand, the
ASEAN Framework Agreement on Services (AFAS) was signed by the ASEAN
Economic Ministers. The objectives of AFAS include:
- To enhance cooperation in services amongst member countries in order
to improve the efficiency and competitiveness, diversify production
capacity, supply and distribution of services of ASEAN’s services
providers within and outside ASEAN;
- To eliminate substantially restrictions to trade in services amongst
member countries;
- To liberalise trade in services by expanding the depth and scope of
liberalization beyond those undertaking by Member Countries under the
General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) on a GATS-plus basis;
- Commitment to fully implement the ASEAN Free Trade Area; and
- Accelerate liberalization of trade in services.
On 15th December 1997 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, the ASEAN Heads of
Government signed the ASEAN Vision 2020. ASEAN Vision 2020 which called for
ASEAN Partnership in Dynamic Development aimed at forging closer economic
integration within the region. The vision statement also resolved to create
a stable, prosperous and highly competitive ASEAN Economic Region, in which
there is a free flow of goods, services, investments, capital, and equitable
economic development and reduced poverty and socio -economic disparities.
"Today, ASEAN is not only a well-functioning, indispensable reality
in the region. It is a real force to be reckoned with far beyond the
region. It is also a trusted partner of the United Nations in the field of
development”
- Kofi Annan, Secretary General of The United Nations (16th
February 2000)
The ASEAN Concord II (also known as the Bali Concord II) was adopted at
the ninth ASEAN Summit by the ten Heads of Government on 7th October 2003 to
reaffirm ASEAN as a concert of Southeast Asian Nations, bonded together in
partnership, in dynamic development and in a community of caring societies.
The Bali Concord II called for the establishment of an ASEAN Community that
would be supported by the three pillars of:
- Political and security cooperation;
- Economic cooperation; and
- Socio-cultural cooperation.
Theses three pillars are closed intertwined and mutually reinforcing in
the effort to achieve peace, stability and prosperity. The ASEAN Economic
Community (AEC) will enhance ASEAN competitiveness, improve ASEAN’s
investment environment and narrow the development gap between ASEAN Member
Countries. The ASEAN Economic Community:
- Emphasized that the AEC would be the realization of the end-goal of
the economic integration stipulated in ASEAN Vision 2020;
- Envisioned a single market and production base, with free flow of
goods, services, investment and labour, and freer flow of capital; and
- Recognized that the realization of a fully integrated economic
community requires implementation of both liberalization and cooperation
measures including the need for the recognition of educational
qualification.
The highest decision-making organ of ASEAN is the Meeting of the ASEAN
Heads of State and Government. The ASEAN Summit is convened every year. The
ASEAN Ministerial Meeting (Foreign Ministers) is held on an annual basis.
Ministerial meetings on several other sectors are also held: agriculture and
forestry, economics, energy, environment, finance, information, investment,
labour, law, regional haze, rural development and poverty alleviation,
science and technology, social welfare, transnational crime, transportation,
tourism, youth, the AIA Council and, the AFTA Council. Supporting these
ministerial bodies are 29 committees of senior officials and 122 technical
working groups. The ASEAN Coordinating Committee on Services (CCS) is one
such committee.
The ASEAN CCS is the negotiating forum mandated to progressively
liberalise services within ASEAN and currently negotiates, primarily along
the “offer-and-request” negotiating regime, the following sectors:
- Business Services (including Professional Services);
- Construction Services;
- Healthcare Services;
- Maritime Transport Services;
- Telecommunications and Information Technology Services;
- Tourism Services; and
- Education Services.
Within the ASEAN CCS was established the Ad Hoc Expert Group on Mutual
Recognition Arrangements with the sole objective of realizing framework
agreements on mutual recognition for the identified priority professional
services within the ASEAN Framework Agreement on Services.
3. MUTUAL RECOGNITION – BASIC UNDERSTANDING
Article VII of GATS (Recognition) among the provisions, categorically
states that:
- For the purposes of the fulfillment of its standard or criteria for
the authorization, licensing or certification of services provider, a
member country may recognize the education or experience obtained,
requirements met, or licenses or certifications granted in a particular
member country. Such agreement may be based upon an agreement or
arrangement with the country concerned or may be accorded autonomously;
- A member country shall not accord recognition in a manner which would
constitute a means of discrimination between countries in the application
of its standards or criteria for the authorization, licensing or
certification of services providers or a disguised restriction on trade in
services;
- Wherever appropriate, recognition would be based on multilaterally
agreed criteria; and
- Member countries shall work in cooperation with relevant
intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations towards the
establishment and adoption of common international standards and criteria
for re cognition and common international standards for the practice of
relevant services, trades and professions.
AFAS Article V (Mutual Recognition) states that:
- Member State may recognize the education or experience obtained,
requirements met, or licenses or certifications granted in another Member
State, for the purpose of licensing or certification of service providers.
It has been observed that Mutual Recognition Arrangements, amongst
others, can be:
- Binding treaties between Governments;
- Established as a framework that enables certain procedures required
in the host country to be undertaken at the home country;
- Limited, confined to specific scope; and
- Between non-governmental institutions, regulatory authorities.
4. MUTUAL RECOGNITION OF PROFESSIONAL QUALIFICATIONS
The International Federation of Surveyors Publication No. 27 (Mutual
Recognition of Professional Qualification) (2002) states that mutual
recognition is an arrangement that allows a qualified surveyor who seeks
mobility to another country to acquire the same recognition as that held by
surveyors who have qualified in that country, without having to re-qualify.
To understand the nature of mutual recognition it is useful to look at
the different working situations.
- Recognition does not relate to the situation of "getting a job". In
general, employment is a matter between the employer and the employee.
Getting a work permit in another country may be subject to domestic
regulations including that of immigration, but that has nothing to do with
recognition of professional qualifications.
- Recognition may, however, relate to the situation where a foreign
employee wants to become a member of the professional institution in the
host country, and thereby enjoy the benefits of being recognized as an
equal professional and sharing the same rights.
- Recognition becomes even more important when a professional wants to
practise in the host country. Recognition of professional competence
conferred through mutual recognition arrangement may then represent a
competitive element in terms of marketing services to clients. Recognition
becomes crucial when a professional seeks to qualify to practice within a
licensed area (typically for cadastral surveys).
Mutual recognition of professional qualification is thus a device for
facilitating an efficient mobility of surveying professionals within the
global working place for surveying services. It is thus important that
information is available to understand, firstly, how surveyors in different
countries acquire their professional qualifications and secondly, the
process by which their professional competence is assessed.
It is thus a process that allows the qualifications attained in one
country (the home country) to be recognized in another country (the host
country). It allows each country to retain its own kind of professional
education and training.
5. ASEAN’S MUTUAL RECOGNITION ARRANGEMENT
The 30th ASEAN Coordinating Committee on Services (CCS) meeting held on
10th to 12th July 2002 in Surabaya, Indonesia agreed to:
- Adopt a sectoral approach to develop mutual recognition arrangements
for the identified professional services; and
- To draw up broad guidelines to assist the sectoral working groups in
developing the MRAs for the respective professional services including the
timeframe.
At the 31st ASEAN CCS meeting in Siemreap, Cambodia on 25th and 26th
February 2003, the Committee requested all Member Countries to consult their
respective professional bodies in their capitals to come up with the
appropriate approach for concluding MRAs in their respective areas.
Surveyors in Malaysia had already decided that the appropriate approach
for the surveying profession would be that of mutual recognition of
surveying qualifications along the lines as was deliberated within the
International Federation of Surveyors.
A workshop on Mutual Recognition Arrangement was hosted by Malaysia on
the sideline of the 32nd ASEAN CCS meeting in Kuala Lumpur between 30th June
and 2nd July 2003. At the workshop, mutual recognition of surveying
qualifications was proposed together with an outline concept. The 32nd ASEAN
CCS meeting agreed that efforts must begin in earnest to develop framework
agreement for mutual recognition to facilitate the free movement of
professional within ASEAN.
The 33rd meeting of the ASEAN CCS on 5th – 7th November 2003 in Bali,
Indonesia called for the completion of MRAs for qualifications in major
(priority) professional services by 2008. The major professional services
identified are Architecture, Engineering, Surveying and Accountancy. This
decision was re-visited and re -affirmed at the 34th meeting of the ASEAN
CCS in Vientiane, Lao PDR on 10th – 12th March 2004. The same meeting called
for the completion of the Engineering MRA by late 2004. The final draft of
the ASEAN Engineering MRA was completed in September 2004.
The “Roadmap for the Integration of ASEAN” called for, among others, the
free flow of professional services in the region by 2020. In this regard,
the critical success factor being the ability of ASEAN professional services
providers to move freely in the region to provide their services. The
“Roadmap” identified that the conclusion of ASEAN MRAs for each professional
services as an essential step towards achieving this goal.
6. ASEAN’S FRAMEWORK AGREEMENT ON MUTUAL RECOGNITION OF SURVEYING
QUALIFICATION
Mutual recognition arrangement for surveying qualification is essential
in the mobility of surveyors and the precursor of the free flow of
professional surveying services. The recognition of surveying qualification
must follow an agreed pre-determined and published methodology. The creation
and agreement of the recognition methodology is essential to:
- Ensure the standardization of requirements and expectations;
- Transparency; and
- Provide guidance in according recognition.
The development of the ASEAN Framework Agreement on Mutual Recognition of
Surveying
Qualification will:
- Provide guidelines for the ASEAN wide recognition/accreditation
process;
- Ensure completeness of information provided;
- Standardize the format of information and documentation required; and
- Expedite the process of assessment for recognition.
The proposed ASEAN Framework Agreement on Mutual Recognition of Surveying
Qualification can comprise five primary components, basically:
- Definition (e.g. – A Surveyor is a professional person with academic
qualifications and technical expertise [post-graduate training]);
- Recognition provisions;
- Recognition mechanisms;
- Dispute settlement provisions; and
- Capacity building (and technical assistance) provisions.
The last component is essential in the ASEAN context as it must be
recognized that there exist varying levels of development in the field of
surveying within each Member Countries.
The recognition component of the Framework Agreement can comprise five
primary requirements for information and documentation, namely:
- General information of the Surveying programme;
- Management structure at the teaching institution;
- Management system and examination procedures in the programme;
- Lecturing capacity; and
- Facilities.
Working towards an ASEAN Framework Agreement on Mutual Recognition of
Surveying Qualification also allows for the:
- Understanding of practices for assuring professional competence;
- Understanding the governing domestic requirements for registration
and licensing of surveyors; and
- Understanding the governing domestic requirement to qualify as a
practicing professional.
7. ISSUES AND CHALLENGES
It must be recognized that professional services are very wide ranging
and heterogeneous but form an important component of services. The decision
to develop sectoral MRAs is a positive development for professional services
within ASEAN. Surveying services is an equally important component of
services and contributes significantly towards national development, nation
building as well as ensuring security and sustainability. The following can
be observed, generally, of the surveying industry within the ASEAN context:
- Demand for surveying services has not grown significantly over the
past five years particularly in the aftermath of the Asian financial
crises;
- The rapid advancement and adoption of ICT has significantly altered
the surveying processes. The increasing and widespread development of ICT
is opening up new prospects for the profession and is expected to lead to
strong growth in cross-border trade (under Mode 1 )
(GATS Modes of Supply : 1) Cross-border supply 2)
Consumption abroad…3) Commercial
presence 4) Presence of Natural Persons)
- The profession has yet to become internationalized unlike the legal
profession (the legal profession in the past decade has been observed to
have become internationalized and more and more frequently, lawyers are
having to conduct transactions extending across national borders and
involving several jurisdictions)
- The surveying market is not dominated by any large regional or
multinational firms except, possibly, for the offshore hydrographic
surveying for the hydrocarbon industry. Surveying firms tend,
traditionally, to be local/provincial and very often owned and operated by
a sole professional.
- The industry does not engage in research and development. As a
consequence, it relies on methodologies and technologies developed by the
more advance countries thus constantly requiring capital and training.
In the efforts to develop an ASEAN Framework Agreement on Mutual
Recognition of Surveying Qualification, key challenges included:
- No common ASEAN-wide understanding (definition) of surveying services
and its scope of responsibilities; and
- No specific Central Product Classification coding except for Surface
and Sub - surface Surveying and Map Making.
This lack of understanding and the absence of a specific CPC code for
Surveying Services have somewhat dampened the enthusiasm and interest in
working towards and expediting such an agreement. It has also somehow
relegated Surveying Services to non-professional status in the context of
trade-in-services. There has been an instance where a WTO member country
refers surveying as non-professional services.
The task before ASEAN Surveying Fraternity is to develop capacity and
confidence within
the Industry, especially among the younger generation of surveying
professionals able to:
- Embrace the rapid pace of technological advancement and innovations
and employ these advancement and innovations judiciously and ethically in
support of their respective national goals and aspirations;
- Effectively practice the science that is surveying within a
liberalized marketplace; and
- Establishing world-class practices that can efficiently serve the
needs of and contribute towards the betterment of society, the environment
and nation building.
At the national level, it is important that there should be a
consensus-building process involving government, industry and the
public-at-large primarily aimed at:
- Enhancing the role, relevance and recognition for surveying
professionals;
- Domestic capacity building; and
- Reviewing and revising domestic regulations to ensure an appropriate
level of domestic competence, competitiveness and capacity.
It must be appreciated that the process of liberalization would involve
adjustments which can give rise to concerns or even risks to the social and
environmental fabric of a society and thus, there should be learned analyses
and studies on the impacts of such liberalization on the domestic surveying
industry.
8. THE QUEST FOR RECOGNITION
There must be concerted effort from within the Surveying Fraternity, not
just nationally nor
regionally, but globally to:
- Gain recognition for its role and relevance as Surveyors;
- Ensure the relevance and enhance the pivotal role of surveying in
Nation Building, National Development and Global Sustainability;
- Emerge from its often self-imposed “shell” and work at raising the
profile and prestige of the profession; and
- Work towards the creation of a separate classification for Surveying
Services as the current CPC coding is grossly inadequate. (The current CPC
coding does not recognize the key role of surveying).
Regionally, it is the humble opinion of the authors that ASEAN Surveyor’s
immediate need is
that of recognition, basically:
- Recognition from Government Planners and Leaders for its significant
and substantial role and contribution;
- Recognized and be engaged in consensus-building processes involving
government, industry and public-at-large to further enhance the role,
relevance and recognition for surveying professionals; and
- Recognition conferred with a specific Central Product Classification
code.
This quest for recognition may in some way restore the glamour and
prestige of the surveying profession. It may not prevent the dismal
enrolment and closure of surveying schools around the world but may arrest
the decline or prevent further decline in interest towards the surveying
profession. The surveying profession must remain as a profession of choice!
9. CONCLUSION
ASEAN’s visionary Heads of Government have collectively recognized that
the realization of a fully integrated economic community requires the
implementation of both liberalization and cooperation measures including the
need for the recognition of educational qualification.
The development of the ASEAN Framework Agreement on Mutual Recognition of
Surveying Qualification is an important effort and contribution by the ASEAN
Surveying Fraternity to realize an ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) that will
enhance ASEAN competitiveness, improve ASEAN’s investment environment and
narrow the development gap between ASEAN Member Countries.
Whilst the Surveying Fraternity works on getting the requisite
recognition and emphasizing its role and significance, it is important that
there be recognition from within the various trade -in-services processes
and mechanism including the World Trade Organization through the creation of
a separate Central Production Classification coding for Surveying Services.
This must be a global effort.
“If globalization is indeed inevitable, it is critically
important to ensure that it is immensely productive . . . . . . . . .
. We must make sure that it does that greatest good for the greatest
number of the children of Adam”
- Dr. Mahathir Mohammed, former Prime Minister of Malaysia,
on globalization (South Review, Vol. 1 No. 1, April 2000)
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
Teo Chee Hai is an Executive Council Member, Association of
Authorised Land Surveyors Malaysia; Past President, The Institution of
Surveyors Malaysia; and Member, Land Surveyors Board Peninsular Malaysia.
CONTACTS
Mr. TEO CheeHai
Association of Authorised Land Surveyors Malaysia
2721 Tingkat 1, Jalan Permata Empat
Taman Permata, Ulu Kelang
53300 Kuala Lumpur
MALAYSIA
Fax: + 60 3 4107 1140
E-mail: teoch@jpsurveys.com
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