Showing posts with label ILFTA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ILFTA. Show all posts

24 October 2010

APTA May Offer Sri Lanka Concessions with a Supportive India

24th October 2010, www.thesundayleader.lk

The three giants in the Asia Pacific Trade Agreement (APTA), namely Korea, India and China are prepared to recognize Sri Lanka (SL) as a Least Developed Country (LDC) and give it a near zero (90%) duty concessionary entry into their markets on an average under certain tariff lines, a Commerce Department (CD) official said.

CD Director General Gomi Senadheera speaking at a seminar on Trade Agreements (TAs) on Monday said that currently the duty concession is around 20%.

However reaching a consensus under the 4th round of APTA talks which would make these concessions a reality has been delayed due to disagreements by India, but those disagreements are not with SL, he said.

SL exported about US$ 50 million worth of goods to APTA (formerly Bangkok Agreement) member countries last year. China topped the list with US$ 29 million, followed by India (US$ 13 million) and Korea (US$ six million).

Coir products were the island’s biggest export with US$ 24.5 million followed by natural rubber (US$ 14.5 million). Other exports under APTA included rubber products, fish “products,” floor tiles and tea.

APTA is the biggest trade agreement after the Indo-Lanka Free Trade Agreement (ILFTA), said Senadheera.

The objective of APTA is to cover at least 40% of tariff lines.
But studies have shown that Sri Lanka has under-utilised APTA concessions by 50%, he said.

CD plans to educate exporters about APTA.

Senadheera’s talk however didn’t cover the EU and US markets, SL’s number 1 and number 2 export destinations respectively.

Exports to the EU have been hit due to the withdrawal of the GSP + concession, while certain exports to the USA are under threat because of the labour GSP issue.
“There are a large number of exports made to the USA which could enjoy the GSP duty free concession, resulting in the saving of millions of dollars in duties,” said Senadheera. This ignorance is either on the part of the exporter, or of the importer, he said.
A number of these concessions are tied to the rules of origin criterion, ie the requirement of a minimum local value addition. For instance under APTA, the local value addition should be a minimum of 45%.

Senadhira said that GSP are non-reciprocal concessions/TAs. Other TAs touched upon by Senadhira in his speech were the ILFTA, Sri Lanka-Pakistan FTA (smoked rubber sheets topped the list last year with US$ 10 million worth of exports under this agreement), South Asian Preferential Trade Arrangement (under which arrangement SL made US$ 1.77 million worth of exports last year) and South Asian FTA (some US$ 608,624 worth of exports to India and Pakistan last year, including US$ 579,420 worth of ekel broom sticks to Pakistan). The seminar was organized by the Spices and Allied Products,’ Producers’ and Traders’ Association. (See also page 37)

Ravi Ratnayake, Director, Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, Trade and Investment Division says intra-regional trade can play a large role in reducing poverty, but barriers to trade among the region’s developing countries remain relatively high. “By simply eliminating all tariffs among each other, the region can reduce the number of people living on less than $1 a day by 43 million.” (Source: ESCAP)

The three giants in the Asia Pacific Trade Agreement (APTA), namely Korea, India and China are prepared to recognize Sri Lanka (SL) as a Least Developed Country (LDC) and give it a near zero (90%) duty concessionary entry into their markets on an average under certain tariff lines, a Commerce Department (CD) official said.
CD Director General Gomi Senadheera speaking at a seminar on Trade Agreements (TAs) on Monday said that currently the duty concession is around 20%.
Related Info:
Sri Lankan Exporters Should Make Use of Free Trade Deals

25 May 2010

Sri Lanka Exports to India up 10 fold as Indo-Lanka Free Trade Agreement Marks 10 Yrs

25th May 2010, www.dailynews.lk, Sanjeevi Jayasuriya

Sri Lanka’s overall trade with India is growing closer to six fold and exports from Sri Lanka are growing ten fold. The increased diversity with greater value addition in exports from Sri Lanka is a positive development. March 2010 marks ten years since implementation of the Indo-Sri Lanka Free Trade Agreement (ISFTA) and during this period trade between the two countries expanded rapidly.

Though, there have been teething problems and trade disputes it is important to assess the progress of ILFTA analyzing the positive and the negatives and take stock of how the Agreement should progress in the next decade.

Exports from Sri Lanka to India increased significantly recording US $ 58 million in 2000 to US $ 418.3 million in 2008.

Similarly the exports from India to Sri Lanka have also accelerated from US $ 600.1 million to US $ 3,443 million from 2000 to 2008.

The product base of Sri Lanka diversified largely during this time. In 1999 Sri Lanka exported products to India under 505 tariff lines whereas by 2005 the number of products augmented to 1,062 with several value added products.

By 2008, other than the traditional primary products such as pepper, waste and scrap steel, arecanuts, dried fruit and cloves, several value added products such as insulated wires and cables, pneumatic tyres, ceramics, vegetable fats and oils, refined copper products, apparel, pharmaceutical products and furniture were among the top exports from Sri Lanka to India.

Trade relations between Sri Lanka and India gained momentum since 1990 and grew rapidly as a result of the implementation of ILFTA.

India followed a reform agenda and has progressed much. The “new thinking” in India should be attractive to Sri Lanka. The country needs to take a cue from the statistical input and brilliant decision making process in India, Finance and Planning Deputy Minister Dr Sarath Amunugama said.

“The ILFTA is a restricted agreement as it gives preferences only to Sri Lanka and India. There is a major debate in the US and West on these free trade agreements considering the fact that we live in relatively small world.

The world has changed and we need to change accordingly,” he said.

The country is presented with an ideal situation now. Sri Lanka is ready for a spectacular take off. India and China would be the leading world economies and it will make South Asia a global hot spot.

It is important to develop incredible synergies to exploit the situation, Ceylon Chamber of Commerce Chairman Dr Anura Ekanayake said.

The ILFTA should look at from improving on good and reducing on bad. The agreement could be a platform for much wider relationship as Sri Lanka is high trade dependable.

The agreement should be outward looking and have a major role to play in increasing national investments up to the range of 40 percent which could not mobilize locally, he said.

A two-day conference on the India-Sri Lanka free trade agreement; achievements, challenges and the road ahead jointly organized by the Institute of Policy Studies of Sri Lanka, Centre for WTO Studies, Indo-Lanka Chamber of Commerce and Industry and the India Sri Lanka Joint Business Council was held yesterday.

Image: Finance and Planning Deputy Minister Dr Sarath Amunugama and Ceylon Chamber of Commerce Chairman Dr Anura Ekanayake

Related Info:

 • Indo-Sri Lanka Free Trade Agreement is 10 Yrs Old

 • Indo-Sri Lanka FTA (ISFTA) - Detailed Information - The Board of Investment of Sri Lanka (BOI)