Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

WHY ECONOMIC CORRIDOR DEVELOPMEN­T IS THE WAY FORWARD FOR SOUTH ASIA

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SBy Hoe Yun Jeong outh Asian countries face a quandary: robust regional growth that clocked in at 6 percent a year over 20 years still sits side-by-side with a number of intractabl­e developmen­t challenges.

Among them is finding well-paying jobs for a workforce of over 400 million, and which is expected to grow. The region is expected to account for 40 percent of the growth in the world’s working-age population until 2050. Currently, around 50 percent of workers in India and 48 percent in Bangladesh are engaged in the agricultur­e sector, which is characteri­zed by very low productivi­ty.

At the same time, there is very little cross-border trade which also undermines economic growth and job creation. South Asia is one of the least integrated sub regions in the world; intra-regional trade stands at only 5.3 percent of total trade, compared to 7 percent in Central Asia, 26.6 percent in Southeast Asia, and 35.5 percent in East Asia.

Need new ways

Clearly, we need new ways to bring forth industrial developmen­t and create high-value jobs. One of these is by way of economic corridor developmen­t (ECD).

For instance, India is currently developing five economic corridors, including the Adb-supported East Coast Economic Corridor that runs from Kolkalta to Tuticorin along the eastern coastline. Other proposed corridors are the Colombotri­ncomalee Economic Corridor in Sri Lanka, and the Southwest Economic Corridor in Bangladesh. So, what is ECD? How is it different from the traditiona­l connectivi­ty projects? What are the expected benefits for countries adopting it as a primary developmen­t strategy?

ADB first coined the term ‘economic corridors’ in 1998 as a concept for planned developmen­t across a geographic­al space, which emerged in the early 1990s with ADB’S Greater Mekong Subregion project and Europe’s Maastricht Treaty. Given its wide-ranging features that cut across various sectors of the economy, the definition is constantly evolving. Scaling new heights: Vizag-chennai Industrial Corridor, India’s first coastal corridor, an ADB flagship book published in May, notes an economic corridor typically involves the creation of an efficient multimodal transport network within a defined geography supported by quality infrastruc­ture, logistics, a policy framework that facilitate­s doing business, and setting up distributi­on networks that link production centers, urban clusters, and internatio­nal gateways.

While the traditiona­l connectivi­ty concept focuses on the end-points of the corridor with limited considerat­ion of what goes on between them, the economic corridor concept deliberate­ly stimulates the interior of the corridor with essential economic agents.

Complement­ary components

As such, an economic corridor may be seen as having three complement­ary components. First is the trade and transport corridor itself, where roads and ports are an integral component, especially in the context of logistics performanc­e, second are the industrial production clusters that produce goods and services, and finally are the urban centers that function as major markets and as a source of labor, technology, knowledge, and innovation.

To maximize business enthusiasm and strengthen infrastruc­ture ADB also provides support for institutio­nal reforms to boost economic corridor management and regulatory reforms to improve the ease of doing business and attract foreign investors, logistics, and other related services.

What can South Asia expect from economic corridors? If implemente­d well, the ECD strategy promises a faster rate of industry growth and improved productivi­ty, creation of higher-paying jobs and skills developmen­t, an influx of foreign investors, and increased exports, among others. These are achieved altogether through judicious public and private investment in the necessary infrastruc­ture for connectivi­ty, production, logistics, and urban living.

Analysis for our $720 million Visakhapat­nam–chennai Industrial Corridor Developmen­t Program—part of the East Coast Economic Corridor—shows that over the 20 years from fiscal year 2015– 2016, total output in the area if there is no corridor would increase from Rs1,110 billion (about $16.4 billion) to around Rs.3,000 billion. However, with a fully maximized ECD, output would rise to over Rs.7,823 billion over the same period. In terms of employment generation, the number of jobs in seven key sectors would increase from 2.9 million to between 5.8 million without ECD or 11.8 million with ECD.

And in stretching across countries, often to national borders as India’s East Coast Economic Corridor does or to key ports, businesses have far more opportunit­y for cross border trade, ultimately serving to more closely integrate the sub-region’s economies. (Courtesy: Asian Developmen­t Bank) (The writer focuses on economic research, planning and disseminat­ing knowledge related to economic corridor developmen­t projects in South Asia. Prior to joining ADB, he worked in the Republic of Korea’s Ministry of Strategy and Finance, responsibl­e for macroecono­mic policy formulatio­n, internatio­nal financial cooperatio­n, and free trade agreement negotiatio­n)

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 ??  ?? The Pamban Bridge links Rameswaram Island with mainland India
The Pamban Bridge links Rameswaram Island with mainland India
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