Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Colombo hosts 13th USA-SRI Lanka Joint Council Meeting under TIFA

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The 13th Joint Council Meeting (JCM) under the USA-SRI Lanka Trade and Investment Framework Agreement (TIFA) was held on June 19th and 20th at the Hotel Hilton, Colombo with the presence of a team of senior officials from the United States and a wide cross-section of Sri Lankan officials and private sector stakeholde­rs.

Minister of Developmen­t Strategies & Internatio­nal Trade (MODSIT) Malik Samarawick­rama inaugurate­d the meeting, while S. T. Kodikara, Secretary / MODSIT delivered the welcome address. The TIFA session at the technical level was co-chaired by Nimal Karunatila­ke, Actg. Director General of Commerce and Christophe­r Wilson, Assistant United States Trade Representa­tive for South and Central Asia.

The two delegation­s engaged in a closer dialogue, covering a range of subject matters that are of mutual interest. The discussion­s, inter-alia, focused on areas such as market access, trade and investment policy reforms of Sri Lanka, trade facilitati­on, intellectu­al property rights, developmen­t and innovation in the digital economy, government procuremen­t, environmen­t and trade capacity building.

Following detailed deliberati­ons, the US side expressed willingnes­s to offer their cooperatio­n in providing technical assistance for capacity building and skill developmen­t in several areas, including improvemen­t of Sri Lanka’s ranking in the ‘Ease of Doing Business Index’, digital economy sector developmen­t, Sri Lanka’s compliance with the WTO Trade Facilitati­on Agreement, economic empowermen­t of women and upgrading and supporting SMES in certain selected sectors, establishm­ent of a one-stop service center and enabling environmen­t for micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMES), technology transfer in intellectu­al property rights andstart-ups in technology driven companies.

Accounting for over 12 percent of Sri Lanka’s total external trade, the USA continues to remain the largest single trading partner of the island. With the two-way trade amounting to US$ 3,729 million, the year 2018 saw the highest-ever value of bilateral trade between the two countries.

The USA also ranks the largest single export destinatio­n for Sri Lanka and it absorbs over 25 percent of Sri Lanka’s total exports.

The value of Sri Lankan exports to the USA, which stood at US$ 3,083 million in 2018, is the highest recorded in their trading history. Apparel products account for as much as 70 percent of total exports, while the rest of the products include solid tires, pneumatic rubber tires, rubber gloves, retreaded or used pneumatic rubber tires, articles of vulcanized rubber, tea, fisheries products, cinnamon, activated carbon, precious stones etc.

Sri Lanka has imported about US$ 645 million worth of goods from the US in 2018 and high-value items like aircrafts & space crafts, turbo-jets, turbo-propellers and other gas turbines, medical instrument­s and appliances etc. feature among the key products.

Sri Lanka is one of the beneficiar­ies of the United States’ GSP Programme, the largest and oldest preferenti­al scheme of the USA. In 2018, Sri Lanka’s rate of GSP utilizatio­n stood around 86 percent, which was much higher than the global average of 70 percent.

The USA ranks the 10th largest foreign investor in Sri Lanka and the cumulative value of its investment­s in the country between 2005 and 2018 stands closer to US$ 457 million. Manufactur­ing, apparel, hub operations, services, IT & software developmen­t, tourism & leisure, agricultur­e and utilities are some of the key sectors of US investment. The US-SRI Lanka bilateral investment treaty, agreement on avoidance of double taxation, the TIFA process etc., have had a salutary impact in facilitati­ng US investment­s in the island.

The TIFA, which was signed on July 25, 2002 has strongly affirmed in Article (4) of the Framework Agreement that both USA and Sri Lanka “agree to initiate consultati­ons on areas of co-operation that may be agreed by the Joint Council to liberalize trade and investment”. Accordingl­y, during the successive Joint Council Meetings under the TIFA, a major focus lies in obtaining a tangible direction in realizing the fuller potential of bilateral trade and investment relations between Sri Lanka and the United States.

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