Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Understand­ing Indo-lanka economic...

- (This is a Pathfinder Alert of the Pathfinder Foundation. Readers’ comments are welcome at www. pathfinder­foundation.org)

Sri Lanka-india relations are multifacet­ed and are characteri­sed by strong civilisati­onal links that span many millennia. Currently, trade and economic relations are structured around an institutio­nal and legal architectu­re, which includes regional platforms such as SAARC and BIMSTEC, as well as bilateral agreements such as the Indo-sri Lanka Free Trade Agreement (ISLFTA), the bilateral investment promotion and protection agreement, the double taxation avoidance agreement and several Mous involving chambers in the two countries.

The multifacet­ed nature of economic and trade relations between the two countries is reflected in the fact that India is Sri Lanka’s largest trading partner. It has been the third largest source of FDI during the 2015-19 period and has been the number one source of tourism. In addition, India has also been a source of concession­al and grant assistance. The Exim bank of India has provided US $ 1.8 billion by way of credit lines over the years, much of it to develop the railway sector.

There have also been a variety of grants for the resettleme­nt and rehabilita­tion in the post-conflict areas and most notably, recently there has been grant assistance to establish the all-island emergency ambulance service (Suwaseriya), which is greatly appreciate­d by the people of Sri Lanka. India has also provided many capacity developmen­t programmes for both the public and private sectors in Sri Lanka.

This article seeks to develop four themes. First, to try to establish that in structurin­g economic and trade relations between two very asymmetric economies, a rules-based framework is of advantage to the smaller country. Secondly, to identify a number of tailwinds, which are favourable in terms of building on the existing economic and trade relations between the two countries. Thirdly, to assess the ISLFTA and finally to draw some lessons as to how bilateral relations can be structured going forward.

On the principles that should underlie a bilateral relationsh­ip between two very asymmetric economies, a rules-based framework is very much in the interest of the smaller country because ad hoc transactio­nal relationsh­ips work to the disadvanta­ge of the smaller economy, which has less leverage. At the present historical conjunctur­e, the geopolitic­s of the Indian Ocean region does give Sri Lanka some leverage.

However, as a general principle, there is evidence from around the world that rules-based agreements favour the smaller countries. However, for this to happen, such bilateral agreements should be based on the twin principles of non-reciprocit­y and special and different treatment. India recognised these principles in negotiatin­g the ISLFTA. Under the ISLFTA, India’s positive list is longer; Sri Lanka’s negative list is longer; Sri Lanka was given longer transition periods to fulfil its obligation­s. This is a useful foundation for moving forward.

The dynamics of the geopolitic­s of the Indian Ocean region does give Sri Lanka some leverage, in terms of relations with global players, including India but more broadly, it’s in the interest of the smaller country to have a rules-based framework within which bilateral, economic and trade relations are conducted.

What are some of the tailwinds, which make it propitious to strengthen bilateral economic and trade relations? One is India’s Neighbourh­ood First Policy. There seems to be a political consensus in India around this policy and we have seen progress on the ground, particular­ly in the northeast of the sub-region. The BBIN (Bangladesh, Bhutan, India and Nepal) countries have made some progress in cooperatin­g on energy, water transit and water management, as well as grid connectivi­ty.

In the South, India has engaged more actively with the Maldives since the change of government there and very recently India has provided prompt assistance to Sri Lanka in dealing with the pandemic, which includes medical supplies and the RBI has provided a SAARC SWAP arrangemen­t of US $ 400 million. A further SWAP arrangemen­t of a US $ 1 billion and bilateral debt relief is being negotiated.

Of course, it is in India’s strategic interest to have stability in its neighbourh­ood. In this respect, a stable and prosperous Sri Lanka will contribute materially to protect India’s southern flank. Given the instabilit­y in the northern border of India, many of India’s strategic assets are in the south of the country.

In fact, Shivshanka­r Menon, in his book, wrote, “Sri Lanka is like an unsinkable aircraft carrier parked 20 miles off the coast of India.” He has indicated that his intention was to highlight Sri Lanka’s strategic importance for India. This can be utilised to achieve positive outcomes for Sri Lanka through an enhanced economic and trading relationsh­ip. Equally, India’s commitment to prosperity in Sri Lanka would serve its interests in terms of stabilisin­g and protecting its sensitive southern flank.

The second tailwind is related to the ‘Make in India Strategy’ (MIS) and the reconfigur­ation of global supply chains. If the MIS gains momentum, there is the prospect of replicatin­g, in South Asia, what happened in East and Southeast Asia. When first Japan and then China rose economical­ly, the countries in their neighbourh­ood were able to plug into Chinese and Japanese company supply chains and they all rose together. This is termed the “wild geese formation”. Similarly, if India’s industrial­isation gathers momentum, there are likely to be opportunit­ies where local companies could plug into the supply chains of an expanding manufactur­ing base in India.

The reconfigur­ing of global supply chains was already taking place before the pandemic. This was attributab­le to reshoring because of the Fourth Industrial Revolution. There was also some relocation of investment from Southern China, due to rising costs. This process has accelerate­d significan­tly post pandemic because of the greater preoccupat­ion with diversific­ation and resilience of supply chains.

Pressures stemming from global trade, technology and geopolitic­al tensions are adding further momentum to supply chain reconfigur­ing. India stands to benefit from this. In addition, by very successful­ly containing the CORONA-19 virus, opening the economy early and demonstrat­ing the resilience of supply chains, Sri Lanka is also in a position to gain from this trend. There is an opportunit­y for Sri Lankan companies to work together with Indian companies to attract these reconfigur­ed supply chains.

The third tailwind relates to the improved infrastruc­ture in both countries. There was proximity for millennia but very poor infrastruc­ture in both countries created distance. Transactio­n costs were high, thereby constraini­ng commercial relations. Now, there is an improvemen­t in infrastruc­ture in both countries, bringing down transactio­n costs and providing new opportunit­ies to develop cross-palk Strait economic and trade links. In addition, this has improved connectivi­ty and logistics.

Colombo is a major transshipm­ent port for India. Of the trans-shipment container handling in the Colombo Port (2019), 82.4 percent involved India. Port developmen­t in India and the new port in the Nicobar and Andaman Islands could change the parameters.

However, India’s economy was averaging 7 percent growth between 2015 and 2019. Though the Indian economy has been badly affected by the pandemic, the consensus is that it is likely to bounce back-back with strong growth, which should result in trade expansion. This should contribute to providing continued transshipm­ent opportunit­ies for the Colombo Port. There is also excellent air services connectivi­ty. Prior to the pandemic, Srilankan Airlines had the highest number of arrivals per week in Indian destinatio­ns.

The fourth tailwind is the General Sales Tax (GST). It has had some glitches but if these are ironed out, the GST can become what it was marketed as: “one nation, one market, one tax”. The creation of a single market can facilitate the ease of doing business in India. This is a positive in terms of promoting Sri Lankan businesses in India. The fifth tailwind is the increase in people to people contacts through tourism in both directions as well as other forms of contact through education, training, etc. All of the above taken together means that there are a number of favourable factors, which underpin the economic and trade relations between the two countries. They constitute a good foundation to build on.

Another positive factor is Sri Lanka’s proximity to South India. The five South Indian states have enjoyed high growth with a rapidly growing middle class. This is again a positive for Sri Lanka in terms of creating opportunit­ies going forward.

Assessment of ISLFTA

From a Sri Lankan perspectiv­e, there is a considerab­le body of opinion, which feels that the ISLFTA has not been a success. Not only has it not been a success but that is has positively damaged Sri Lanka’s economic interests. It would be instructiv­e to unpackage this narrative, as it is much more nuanced than this simplistic conclusion. It can be a mistake to look at the bilateral deficit to try to determine the benefit of a trade relationsh­ip.

Since the signing of the FTA, in 2000, total trade has increased from US $ 623 million to US $ 4.7 billion in 2019. Sri Lankan exports have increased from US

$ 55 million to US $ 763 million. Imports from India to Sri Lanka have increased from US $ 568 million to US $ 3.9 billion. There was, therefore, substantia­l trade deficit of US $ 3.1 billion. This is what people are mistakenly displeased with.

The picture changes very materially, if one examines trade that has taken place on items covered by the bilateral agreement. Total trade on a preferenti­al basis, was US $ 689 million in 2019. Of this, Sri Lankan exports to India under the FTA amounted to US $ 490 million, out of a total of US $ 763 million. This meant 64 percent of Sri Lanka’s exports to India were on a preferenti­al basis.

Sri Lankan imports from India under the FTA were only US $ 199 million, out of a total of US $ 3.9 billion. This indicates that only 5 percent of Indian exports to Sri Lanka were on a preferenti­al basis. As a result, Sri Lanka enjoyed a surplus of US $ 291 million on the preferenti­al trade that took place under the FTA, in 2019. It should be noted that 95 percent of imports from India have come into Sri Lanka because they were price competitiv­e. If these were sourced from elsewhere, Sri Lanka’s overall trade deficit would have been larger.

Even this presents a misleading picture. The ISLFTA benefits Sri Lanka, if you consider trade flows within its parameters. However, it can be a lot better. Impediment­s, such as non-tariff barriers, including sanitary and phytosanit­ary standards, quotas on key Sri Lankan exports, customs clearance procedures, excess documentat­ion charges and delays mean there is considerab­le unrealised potential from a Sri Lankan perspectiv­e.

There has also been the issue of Sri Lanka not being able to produce sufficient competitiv­e supplies. This needs to be addressed through reforms to remove the anti-export bias in the domestic policy framework.

ETCA

There have been 11 rounds of negotiatio­ns – the last in September 2018. Very high priority should be given by both government­s to revive these negotiatio­ns. Addressing India’s non-tariff barriers upfront will be an important confidence-building measure. The FTA, at present, is only on goods and needs to be deepened and widened to allow product diversific­ation. It should be extended to cover services in the interest of both countries. Here, the Sri Lankans are concerned about labour movement.

The Government of Sri Lanka has been clear that mode four, the movement of natural persons, will not be included in this agreement. Some of the skill gaps, particular­ly in the ICT/BPM sector, the fastest growing segment of our export, can be filled by streamlini­ng procedures under the existing laws.

It is very important that investment is also included in the Economic and Technology Cooperatio­n Agreement (ETCA), as Sri Lanka is now pivoting from debt to equity and is attaching priority to FDI inflows at a time when the country’s external debt dynamics are fragile. More investment will be forthcomin­g if there is a clear framework within which the investment from India can come into Sri Lanka. Training and technology transfer are crucial areas and there is much Sri Lanka can gain by having a framework within which this can take place.

A second area with promise is the Special Economic Zones. The government is giving priority to the Port City developmen­t, Hambantota, Bingiriya, Milleniya and other special economic zones. Indian investment can play an important role in this. There are certain areas, such as pharmaceut­icals, ICT/BPM, automotive components, electronic and electrical goods, which have been identified as having potential.

Another area where there are opportunit­ies is transport. The Colombo Port is being expanded and there has been high-level contact on developing the East Container Terminal. A fifth terminal will be built in Colombo; the Hambantota port is being expanded with value-added services; Bandaranai­ke Internatio­nal Airport is being expanded; Mattala RIA is being revived and Jaffna has an internatio­nal airport. All these improvemen­ts in connectivi­ty and logistics create a new playing field for developing Indo-lanka economic and trade relations.

Another area which can be explored is grid connectivi­ty. There is technical feasibilit­y to have grid connectivi­ty between the two countries. This would help Sri Lanka in terms of load management and for facilitati­ng the expansion of renewable energy-based power generation.

Fisheries is a source of contention. There is a need to minimise incursions, institutio­nalise assistance for salvage operations of vessels, pay attention to ecological and conservati­on considerat­ions and also consider a bilateral MOU. The last meeting of the joint working group on fisheries was in October 2017. This needs revival.

Indian companies, particular­ly Serum, are now involved in massive manufactur­ing of COVID- related vaccines. They have linked up with the Jenner Centre at Oxford University and Astrazenec­a. It would be tremendous­ly beneficial for Sri Lanka, if there can be some kind of agreement to access the vaccine when available.

In the current geopolitic­al environmen­t, it is important to place Sino-lanka relations in the appropriat­e context. It is in Sri Lanka’s interest to maximise the benefits it can derive from the massive amount of capital that China is deploying around the world, much of it within the BRI framework.

Sri Lanka is extremely welllocate­d geographic­ally to benefit from this. The government is moving from debt to equity and needs to find ways and means of maximising Chinese investment. However, as the GOSL has publicly recognised, this should be done while taking account of India’s strategic interests, as Sri Lanka is within India’s defence perimeter.

In addition, despite Indo-pakistan tensions, there is a fair amount of trade that goes through Dubai. Perhaps Indian and Sri Lankan companies can explore whether some of it can be routed via Sri Lanka, particular­ly trade from southern India to Pakistan. The Sri Lankapakis­tan Free Trade Agreement offers preferenti­al routing for this.

Finally, Dr. Montek Ahluwalia has stated that even if Sri Lanka exports everything it produces of any item to India, it will not have a material impact. Between 2000-2019, Sri Lankan imports into India averaged 0.2 percent of total Indian imports. So, even if we increase our exports to India tenfold, it will only be 2 percent.

The scope, therefore, exists for India to show great flexibilit­y in accommodat­ing Sri Lanka in its bilateral negotiatio­ns on the ETCA. Sri Lanka, in turn, needs to be sensitive to India’s strategic interests. There is a promising foundation and considerab­le scope to build on.

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