According to www.thailand-business-news.com, ASEAN’s green ambitions and economic growth are being undermined by systemic weaknesses in supply chain integrity — with illicit trade costing governments US$3.7 billion annually in tobacco excise revenue alone, and counterfeit goods draining an estimated US$35 billion per year.
FDI Growth vs. Illicit Trade Threats
ASEAN attracted US$226 billion in foreign direct investment in 2024, reinforcing its role as a global production hub. Yet this momentum is at risk: illicit trade erodes public revenues, damages ecosystems, fuels organised crime, and compromises national security. The source states that losses in tobacco revenue alone could exceed US$11 billion over the next three years.
Broader Security and Human Costs
- Illicit trade networks overlap with human trafficking, money laundering, and forced labour — globally linked to 27.6 million people trapped in forced labour, generating US$150 billion in illicit profits
- Criminal syndicates exploit border gaps and inconsistent enforcement across free trade zones
- The threat extends beyond customs concerns into frontline national security
Technology and Regional Coordination Gaps
Digital tools such as track-and-trace systems and AI-driven risk profiling are advancing in Thailand and Malaysia, but according to the report, cross-border integration remains critically underdeveloped. Without interoperable regulatory frameworks, national efforts remain fragmented.
Practical Pathways to Integrity
To align trade facilitation with sustainability goals, the source identifies three concrete measures:
- Digital traceability systems embedded directly into supply chains
- Targeted market surveillance to detect and disrupt illicit flows
- Trusted green lanes for compliant businesses — incentivising transparency while accelerating legitimate trade
As ASEAN approaches the Philippines’ 2026 chairmanship, elevating supply chain integrity across economic, security, and sustainability agendas is described as essential.
“Supply chain integrity is not a constraint on growth — it is its very foundation.” — Source: Why Asean needs to pay more attention to supply chain integrity
Source: www.thailand-business-news.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










