Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Fixing the NTBs between India and Sri Lanka

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The previous Verité Insight titled ‘Exports to India: putting the “free” back into the free trade agreement’ highlighte­d that when negotiatin­g trade agreements, focusing on “dutyfree access” alone can be insufficie­nt, as non-tariff barriers (NTBs) can act as a strong impediment to exports.

It demonstrat­ed the case of processed food exports from Sri Lanka t o India, which have not expanded as expected. This is despite strong duty concession­s from the India–Sri Lanka Free Trade Agreement (ISFTA). The NTBs faced by exporters trumped the duty concession­s.

This Insight provides a solution to a significan­t NTB faced by processed food exporters: the NTB of undue delays and costs incurred at Indian ports to prove compliance with Indian standards and regulation­s. A mutual recognitio­n agreement (MRA) will solve most of these issues and there is no impediment in India recognisin­g the need for such an agreement.

The current problem

Testing for compliance with standards and regulation­s are known as conformity assessment procedures (CAPs). These can have legitimate public policy objectives such as protecting the health and safety of consumers and protecting the environmen­t. However, when the CAPs in place create high costs, delays and uncertaint­y, they become barriers t o trade – NTBs. This has become the case for processed food exports to India: high levels of sampling, storage costs, uncertain and sometimes lengthy time to clear testing procedures have effectivel­y throttled exports of foods to India.

Failed solutions

India and Sri Lanka already have agreements in place to avoid CAPs unduly restrictin­g trade. An agreement between Sri Lanka Standards Institute (SLSI) and Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) in 2006 allows the two institutio­ns to accept inspection and test reports issued by the other wherever standards are harmonized. Harmonisat­ion is when two countries adopt the same standard for a product. The absence of harmonised standards and the slow pace of discussion­s towards adopting them makes this agreement mostly irrelevant.

A prior agreement in 2002 between the SLSI and Export Inspection Council (EIC) of India benefits only Indian exporters. It allows Indian exporters to send certain products to Sri Lanka without having to undergo further checks in Sri Lankan ports, if they have a certificat­e of conformity to Sri Lankan standards issued from and Indian lab accredited by the EIC. However, this agreement is one sided since it does not reciprocat­e this treatment for exports from Sri Lanka to India.

Available solution

If the existing one-sided agreement was made reciprocal, it would become what is known as a MRA. This is simpler than harmonisat­ion because each country can continue to maintain its own standards and regulation­s. In an MRA, each country agrees to accept certificat­es of conformity to its standards/regulation­s issued by the sending country’s institutio­ns, which are suitably evaluated and accredited to do so (Refer Exhibit 1).

Since conformity is assessed and establishe­d at the point of sending, the exporter does not have to suffer the uncertaint­ies and difficulti­es that could arise in the receiving country. Exporters will also generally have more power to ensure that certifying institutio­ns do not cause undue costs and delays in their own country.

An MRA is a quick win, because it can start with high-priority products for which the capacity for mutual compliance testing already exists in both India and Sri Lanka and can gradually expand overtime to cover a larger array of products.

Don’t wait for CEPA

The proposed Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p Agreement (CEPA) between India and Sri Lanka already anticipate­s that an MRA would be a component. Furthermor­e, in all its new trade agreements with other countries, India has built-in provisions for MRAs. This makes the MRA a well-recognised and accepted solution for both countries.

The question then is should the MRA wait for CEPA? Or should it be unbundled and implemente­d first?

Trade agreements can be mutually beneficial, but there is no automatic guarantee – the details of the agreement and short to mediumterm dynamics play a large part in the experience of benefits. Research suggests that the lack of provisions within the ISFTA to address NTBs and the weakness of problem-solving initiative­s taken so far have clouded the view of Sri Lankan exporters on further liberalisi­ng trade with India. Therefore, unbundling the MRA from CEPA and implementi­ng it first can help to provide a clearer view on the potential benefits of the existing trade agreement.

And, if t he potential benefits become clear, it could endear a positive problem-solving approach for expanding the trade agreement with greater mutual benefits in the future.

(Verité Research is an independen­t think-tank based in Colombo that provides strategic

analysis to high level decisionma­kers in economics, law, politics and media. Comments are welcome.

Email publicatio­ns @veriterese­arch.org)

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