There are currently over 3000 Free Trade Zones of one form or another in 135 countries around the world. In it’s report on FTZs dated March, 2010, FATF highlighted the following systemic weaknesses that make FTZs vulnerable to money laundering abuse:

  • Inadequate anti-money laundering (AML) and combating the
    financing of terrorism (CFT) safeguards;
  • Relaxed oversight by competent domestic authorities;
  • Weak procedures to inspect goods and register legal entities, including inadequate
    record-keeping and information technology systems; and
  • Lack of adequate coordination and cooperation between zone and Customs authorities.

Please find below a list of countries that have Free Trade Zones:

 Traditional EPZ ModelHybrid EPZ ModelCommercial Free ZoneSingle FactoryFreeport
Asia and the Pacific

Taiwan

China

Korea

Indonesia

Vietnam

Philippines

Bangladesh

India

Malaysia

Pakistan

Sri Lanka

China

Indonesia

Lao PDR

Korea

Philippines

Thailand

Vietnam

China

Japan

Malaysia

Fiji

China

Hong Kong

India

Indonesia

Korea

Macau

Malaysia

Philippines

Singapore

Americas

Argentina

Bahamas

Belize

Dominican Republic

Guatemala

Jamaica

Nicaragua

Peru

Trinidad and Tobago

Uruguay

Venezuela

Bolivia

Brazil

Colombia

Costa Rica

Cuba

Ecuador

El Salvador

Haiti

Honduras

Argentina

Bahamas

Belize

Brazil

Canada

Colombia

Curacao

Panama

Jamaica

Mexico

Bahamas

Chile

Colombia

Panama

Middle East and North Africa

Algeria

Iran

Sudan

Bahrain

Egypt

Syria

Tunisia

Turkey

United Arab

Emirates

Israel

Jordan

Kuwait

Lebanon

Libya

Morocco

Oman

Tunisia

Turkey

United Arab

Emirates

Yemen

 

Iraq

Jordan

Central and Eastern Europe and Central Asia

Slovenia

Belarus

Albania

Bosnia and Herzegovina

Bulgaria

Croatia

Hungary

Kazakhstan

Kyrgyz

Republic Latvia

Lithuania

Macedonia

Moldova

Poland

Ukraine

Czech Republic

Estonia

Latvia

Romania

Serbia

Montenegro

Slovak

Republic Ukraine

Uzbekistan

 

Russian

Federation

Sub-Saharan Africa

Cameroon

Cape Verde

Equatorial

Guinea

Gambia

Ghana

Kenya

Mozambique

Namibia

Nigeria

Senegal

South Africa

Tanzania

Togo

Uganda

Zambia

Zimbabwe

 

Benin

Djibouti

Gabon

Liberia

Mauritius

Tanzania

Togo

Burundi

Madagascar

Malawi

Mali

Mauritius

Senegal

Seychelles

 
Further Information:

Free trade zones (FTZs); these are typically general purpose fenced in, duty-free areas offering warehousing, storage and distribution facilities for trade, transhipment, and re-export of products. These are located in most ports around the world.

Export Processing Zones (EPZs) are industrial areas focusing on assembly and manufacturing of intermediate imports aimed primarily but not exclusively at foreign markets. Particular sectors include labor- intensive, light manufacturing such as garment production and the assembly of electronics. EPZs also promote linkages with the domestic economy by encouraging technology transfer and innovative industrial strategies. Certain types of EPZs are sometimes called Hybrid Export Processing Zones because they combine the traditional export focus of an EPZ with a sub-divided area in which non-export oriented activities can take place.

Enterprise zones are economic development areas intended to revitalize specific urban or rural areas where they are located through tax incentives and financial grants. These are most often found in the developed world.

Freeports typically the largest of the zones, accommodate all types of activities including tourism, retail sales, and on-site residence, and accompany a broader set of incentives and benefits. Freeports are different from traditional FTZs as they are not seen as export drivers but areas promoting overall economic growth linking the zones with the overall economy of the nation. This has also resulted in greater expansion and liberalization of the core set of policies present in most free zone programs. The European Union allows inward processing relief and other customs schemes that produce some of the benefits of free ones without requiring formal zone definition. In the UK, for example, free ports do not offer significant benefits beyond inbound processing relief schemes. As a consequence ports like Rotterdam have marketed themselves as “freer than a Freeport”.

Single factory EPZ schemes provide incentives similar to export processing zones but are not a zone at all, rather a single factory located anywhere in a country which receives the special duty free privileges of zones. In the United States they are also called sub-zones.

Foreign Trade Zones is the name of the specially designated zones in the United States. They are established in or adjacent to a port of entry in which all types of merchandise may be held without being subject to U.S. Customs duties and other taxes.

Special Economic Zones (SEZs): SEZs extend the relaxed tax and administration characteristics of FTZs to investment arrangements, labour laws, management practices, and wage rate policies in specific areas of the country. Originally this structure applied only to China but versions now exist in India and elsewhere. China has proposed applying special treatment within SEZs to promotion of real estate, tourism, infrastructure development and banking.

Sources: BearingPoint, ILO database;
WEPZA (2007); FIAS research.
FATF