Nepal national single window : towards a paperless trade regime

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2023-09-13Corporate Author/ s
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RT Generic T1 Nepal national single window : towards a paperless trade regime A1 Sharma, Puspa, Dahal, Kshitiz YR 2023-09-13 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/6435 PB UN.ESCAP AB <p>The Framework Agreement on Facilitation of Cross-border Paperless Trade in Asia and the Pacific (CPTA), which entered into force on 20 February 2021, is a UN treaty deposited with the Secretary General of the United Nations. The treaty aims at accelerating the implementation of digital trade facilitation measures for trade and development. Nepal is not yet a party to the treaty, but it has been making efforts, mostly unilaterally, to digitalize trade processes and create a paperless trade regime. The most important of these has been the progress made in the establishment and operationalization of the Nepal National Single Window (NNSW). The COVID-19 crisis has further expedited the implementation of a paperless trade regime. However, advancement in the implementation of paperless trade in Nepal has generally been within the border, mostly excluding the cross-border exchange of data and documents. The NNSW system allows the exchange of cross-border documents and data, and hence should be exploited. Making the current administration of paperless trade seamless and expanding it to cover paperless trade will require legislative reforms, institutional strengthening, harmonization and standardization of data and documents, and proactive engagement in bilateral and regional forums to develop cross-border paperless trade systems. Importantly, acceding to the CPTA could support and strengthen Nepal’s paperless trade system. </p> OL English(30) TY - GEN T1 - Nepal national single window : towards a paperless trade regime AU - Sharma, Puspa, Dahal, Kshitiz Y1 - 2023-09-13 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/6435 PB - UN.ESCAP AB -The Framework Agreement on Facilitation of Cross-border Paperless Trade in Asia and the Pacific (CPTA), which entered into force on 20 February 2021, is a UN treaty deposited with the Secretary General of the United Nations. The treaty aims at accelerating the implementation of digital trade facilitation measures for trade and development. Nepal is not yet a party to the treaty, but it has been making efforts, mostly unilaterally, to digitalize trade processes and create a paperless trade regime. The most important of these has been the progress made in the establishment and operationalization of the Nepal National Single Window (NNSW). The COVID-19 crisis has further expedited the implementation of a paperless trade regime. However, advancement in the implementation of paperless trade in Nepal has generally been within the border, mostly excluding the cross-border exchange of data and documents. The NNSW system allows the exchange of cross-border documents and data, and hence should be exploited. Making the current administration of paperless trade seamless and expanding it to cover paperless trade will require legislative reforms, institutional strengthening, harmonization and standardization of data and documents, and proactive engagement in bilateral and regional forums to develop cross-border paperless trade systems. Importantly, acceding to the CPTA could support and strengthen Nepal’s paperless trade system.
@misc{20.500.12870_6435 author = {Sharma, Puspa, Dahal, Kshitiz}, title = {Nepal national single window : towards a paperless trade regime}, year = {2023-09-13}, abstract = {The Framework Agreement on Facilitation of Cross-border Paperless Trade in Asia and the Pacific (CPTA), which entered into force on 20 February 2021, is a UN treaty deposited with the Secretary General of the United Nations. The treaty aims at accelerating the implementation of digital trade facilitation measures for trade and development. Nepal is not yet a party to the treaty, but it has been making efforts, mostly unilaterally, to digitalize trade processes and create a paperless trade regime. The most important of these has been the progress made in the establishment and operationalization of the Nepal National Single Window (NNSW). The COVID-19 crisis has further expedited the implementation of a paperless trade regime. However, advancement in the implementation of paperless trade in Nepal has generally been within the border, mostly excluding the cross-border exchange of data and documents. The NNSW system allows the exchange of cross-border documents and data, and hence should be exploited. Making the current administration of paperless trade seamless and expanding it to cover paperless trade will require legislative reforms, institutional strengthening, harmonization and standardization of data and documents, and proactive engagement in bilateral and regional forums to develop cross-border paperless trade systems. Importantly, acceding to the CPTA could support and strengthen Nepal’s paperless trade system.
}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/6435} } @misc{20.500.12870_6435 author = {Sharma, Puspa, Dahal, Kshitiz}, title = {Nepal national single window : towards a paperless trade regime}, year = {2023-09-13}, abstract = {The Framework Agreement on Facilitation of Cross-border Paperless Trade in Asia and the Pacific (CPTA), which entered into force on 20 February 2021, is a UN treaty deposited with the Secretary General of the United Nations. The treaty aims at accelerating the implementation of digital trade facilitation measures for trade and development. Nepal is not yet a party to the treaty, but it has been making efforts, mostly unilaterally, to digitalize trade processes and create a paperless trade regime. The most important of these has been the progress made in the establishment and operationalization of the Nepal National Single Window (NNSW). The COVID-19 crisis has further expedited the implementation of a paperless trade regime. However, advancement in the implementation of paperless trade in Nepal has generally been within the border, mostly excluding the cross-border exchange of data and documents. The NNSW system allows the exchange of cross-border documents and data, and hence should be exploited. Making the current administration of paperless trade seamless and expanding it to cover paperless trade will require legislative reforms, institutional strengthening, harmonization and standardization of data and documents, and proactive engagement in bilateral and regional forums to develop cross-border paperless trade systems. Importantly, acceding to the CPTA could support and strengthen Nepal’s paperless trade system.
}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/6435} } TY - GEN T1 - Nepal national single window : towards a paperless trade regime AU - Sharma, Puspa, Dahal, Kshitiz UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/6435 PB - UN.ESCAP AB -The Framework Agreement on Facilitation of Cross-border Paperless Trade in Asia and the Pacific (CPTA), which entered into force on 20 February 2021, is a UN treaty deposited with the Secretary General of the United Nations. The treaty aims at accelerating the implementation of digital trade facilitation measures for trade and development. Nepal is not yet a party to the treaty, but it has been making efforts, mostly unilaterally, to digitalize trade processes and create a paperless trade regime. The most important of these has been the progress made in the establishment and operationalization of the Nepal National Single Window (NNSW). The COVID-19 crisis has further expedited the implementation of a paperless trade regime. However, advancement in the implementation of paperless trade in Nepal has generally been within the border, mostly excluding the cross-border exchange of data and documents. The NNSW system allows the exchange of cross-border documents and data, and hence should be exploited. Making the current administration of paperless trade seamless and expanding it to cover paperless trade will require legislative reforms, institutional strengthening, harmonization and standardization of data and documents, and proactive engagement in bilateral and regional forums to develop cross-border paperless trade systems. Importantly, acceding to the CPTA could support and strengthen Nepal’s paperless trade system.
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No. 4, 2023
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The Framework Agreement on Facilitation of Cross-border Paperless Trade in Asia and the Pacific (CPTA), which entered into force on 20 February 2021, is a UN treaty deposited with the Secretary General of the United Nations. The treaty aims at accelerating the implementation of digital trade facilitation measures for trade and development. Nepal is not yet a party to the treaty, but it has been making efforts, mostly unilaterally, to digitalize trade processes and create a paperless trade regime. The most important of these has been the progress made in the establishment and operationalization of the Nepal National Single Window (NNSW). The COVID-19 crisis has further expedited the implementation of a paperless trade regime. However, advancement in the implementation of paperless trade in Nepal has generally been within the border, mostly excluding the cross-border exchange of data and documents. The NNSW system allows the exchange of cross-border documents and data, and hence should be exploited. Making the current administration of paperless trade seamless and expanding it to cover paperless trade will require legislative reforms, institutional strengthening, harmonization and standardization of data and documents, and proactive engagement in bilateral and regional forums to develop cross-border paperless trade systems. Importantly, acceding to the CPTA could support and strengthen Nepal’s paperless trade system.