Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Sl-b’desh trade deal should have no strings attached tariff: IPS

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Sri Lanka inking a preferenti­al trade agreement (PTA) with Bangladesh should have no strings attached tariff as a key feature to ensure its success, a paper by the researcher­s at the economic think tank Institute of Policy Studies (IPS) suggested.

As the two nations are gearing up to eventually enter into a free trade agreement (FTA) to increase trade flows, the IPS researcher­s stressed the need for Sri Lank and Bangladesh to get concession­s for products manufactur­ed with a comparativ­e advantage and capacity for expansion.

The majority among such products identified were intermedia­te products, showing the significan­ce of tariff cuts from a value chain perspectiv­e, the paper authored by IPS Research Economist Dr. Asanka Wijesinghe and IPS Research

Assistant Chathurrdh­ika Yogarajah highlighte­d.

According to them, the complete eliminatio­n of tariffs would boost bilateral exports by as much as 30-60 percent. However, the existing regional agreements do not positively impact global value chain participat­ion.

“Complex rules of origins and long sensitive lists may explain the trivial gains from regional integratio­n. Higher tariffs are negatively affecting the global value chain participat­ion. Hence, non-string attached tariff eliminatio­ns should be the key feature of a trade deal between the two countries,” said Dr. Wijesinghe.

The decision to enter into a PTA was mutually taken during a discussion between Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa and Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.

While the primary objective of the dialogue between the two leaders was to strengthen economic relationsh­ip, it was agreed that the initial focus would be on exploring the option of entering into a preferenti­al trade agreement with a short list of good.

Earlier this month, the Cabinet of Ministers gave their blessings to the trade minister to negotiate a PTA with Bangladesh.

Sri Lanka and Bangladesh act as stakeholde­r member countries of the SAARC Preferenti­al Trading Arrangemen­t (SAPTA), South Asian Free Trade Area (SAFTA), Global System of Trade Preference (GSTP), Asia-pacific Trade Agreement (APTA) and Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperatio­n (BIMSTEC).

Despite the two countries falling under a number of regional trade agreements, trade movements are at minimum levels.

The bilateral trade peaked to around US $ 170 million between the two countries in 2018, with Sri Lanka exporting

US $ 133 million worth of goods to Bangladesh while importing US $ 37 million worth of goods from Bangladesh.

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