Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

COSMI hails banning of spice re-exports

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Sri Lanka’s Confederat­ion of Micro,

Small and Medium Industries (COSMI) yesterday hailed the government’s recent decision to block the re-export of minor export crops.

COSMI President

Nawaz Rajabdeen said this move would encourage Sri Lanka’s export crop growers and small and medium industrial­ists.

More than 50 percent of Sri Lanka’s agricultur­al exports are spices and allied products.

“The government’s decision to stop importing of pepper, dried areca nut, tamarind, cinnamon, nutmeg, mace, cardamom, cloves and ginger by a gazette is praisewort­hy,” Rajabdeen said.

He said by doing that the government has encouraged the local cultivator­s of minor export crops and small and medium-scale industrial­ists.

“The entire sector suffered during the last 10 years as a few favoured parties were given the opportunit­y to import spices and re-export them without any value addition. It badly affected our local cultivator­s and MSMES.

Although the relevant department issued a condition for value addition, no such value addition was seen to be made,” he noted.

Threatenin­g locally produced exports, Sri Lanka’s re-exports of all types have quietly increased over the last decade.

In 2007, only 1.46 percent of Sri Lanka’s total exports were identified as ‘re-exports’ but a decade later in 2017, such re-exports doubled to 2.88 percent of total exports.

The value of all re-exports (including spices) jumped by a massive 400 percent in 2017, compared to 2007.

Damaging the local spice exports further, due to lower cinnamon and cloves exports, a decline in Lankan spice export revenues too was seen in 2018.

Spices and allied product exports declined 11.53 percent year-on-year to US $ 361.1 million in 2018. The major market for Sri Lanka’s spice exports in 2018 was Mexico, followed by India and the US.

 ??  ?? Nawaz Rajabdeen
Nawaz Rajabdeen

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