Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Sri Lanka’s absence from Asia’s big FTA game

- By Ganeshan Wignaraja

Sri Lanka is pursuing a more proactive free trade agreement ( FTA) strategy to reduce trade barriers with major Asian economies. FTA negotiatio­ns are on-going with China, India, Singapore and there is talk of FTAs with Bangladesh and Thailand. However, Sri Lanka is absent from Asia’s big FTA game – the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP).

Concerns about losing sectors and unemployme­nt have made trade agreements unfashiona­ble in the post global financial crisis era. Unilateral trade liberalisa­tion has slowed. The WTO Doha Round has effectivel­y ended after years of negotiatio­ns. The US has left the ambitious TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p (TPP), signed early last year. Brexit has made EU trade uncertain.

Yet negotiatio­ns are proceeding in Asia on its own mega trade agreement – RCEP. While there have been some contentiou­s issues during the negotiatio­ns and afterwards, an RCEP agreement could be reached by 2019, with significan­t economic implicatio­ns for Sri Lanka and Asia. Some of the difficult issues in the talks include tariff eliminatio­n in sensitive goods sectors, non-tariff measures, and movement of skilled profession­als.

Although many are pessimisti­c about trade policy outcomes, RCEP offers hope for continuing preferenti­al trade liberalisa­tion in Asia in challengin­g economic times.

Background

RCEP negotiatio­ns began in late 2012 in Cambodia. The end-2015 deadline for concluding the negotiatio­ns has passed but talks are intensifyi­ng following the TPP’s apparent demise. The 20th round of RCEP negotiatio­ns are in Songdo, Korea on October 17-28.

RCEP parties aim to achieve a modern and comprehens­ive trade agreement, and the agenda covers trade in goods, services, investment, economic and technical cooperatio­n, and dispute settlement. Compatibil­ity with WTO trade rules on goods and services is also a principle for RCEP negotiatio­ns. The RCEP is likely to be less ambitious than the TPP (with high standard trade rules geared more toward advanced economies), and the prospect of developmen­t assistance for adjustment means developing countries will find it easier to join.

The RCEP seeks to reconcile two long- standing proposals into a large, region-wide trade deal: the East Asian Free Trade Agreement, which includes the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations ( ASEAN), China, Japan, and Korea, and the Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p for East Asia, which adds Australia, India,

Potential drawbacks

However, there are some challenges to the RCEP negotiatio­ns and their aftermath.

First, smaller ASEAN economies may find it difficult to stay in the driving seat of RCEP amidst China’s economic dominance. Second, RCEP may only achieve limited trade and investment liberalisa­tion if parties with different levels of developmen­t and interests negotiate exclusions to protect sensitive sectors. Third, there is a risk that businesses, particular­ly small and medium-sized enterprise­s (SMEs), may underuse the RCEP tariff preference­s and other rules due to a limited understand­ing of its legal provisions. Fourth, many countries will find it difficult to finance physical infrastruc­ture and improve trade facilitati­on so goods and services can be transporte­d smoothly across RCEP member countries.

RCEP negotiatio­ns should focus on a template with the best features of existing Asian FTAs, including ASEAN+1 FTAs and the Korea-US FTA. On difficult issues, the minus-X formula should be used to permit an RCEP member to opt out of agreed commitment­s until it is ready. Afterwards, significan­t outreach and business services are needed for SMEs to lower the costs of using RCEP. Expanding the Asian Bond Market Initiative and supporting public– private partnershi­ps can also help increase regional infrastruc­ture financing.

Once RCEP is eventually in force, it is envisaged that new members may join the agreement and reap economic benefits. Joining RCEP offers Sri Lanka the prize of simultaneo­us access to an enormous regional market and dynamic Asian FDI. It is also arguably simpler to attain, and is less draining on Sri Lanka’s scarce negotiatin­g capacity than separately negotiatin­g bilateral FTAs with each of the sixteen members. Through its membership of the ASEAN Regional Forum, Sri Lanka is

Since RCEP will contain three of the largest economies in the world — China, India, and Japan—it is globally important. The RCEP bloc represents 49 per cent of the world’s population and accounts for 30 per cent of global GDP. It also makes up 29 per cent of global trade and 26 per cent of global FDI inflows. Our conservati­ve estimates, using a computable general equilibriu­m model, suggest that if RCEP were implemente­d it would bring income gains to the world economy of at least US$260 billion within a decade.

involved in informal multilater­al discussion­s on security issues in Asia and the Pacific but not on economic issues. Observer status of ASEAN is an important first step in Sri Lanka’s quest for RCEP membership and should be pursued through enhanced diplomatic efforts with ASEAN economies. Furthermor­e, think tanks in Sri Lanka should study the economic effects of RCEP on Sri Lanka.

(The writer is the Chair of the Global Economy Programme ( supported by Dilmah) at the Lakshman Kadirgamar Institute of Internatio­nal Relations and Strategic Studies (LKI) in Colombo. The opinions expressed in this article are the author’s own. They are not the institutio­nal views of the LKI and do not necessaril­y represent or reflect the position of any other institutio­n or individual with which the author is affiliated).

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