Title: South Asian Free Trade Area - Some Issues
1South Asian Free Trade Area- Some Issues
2Outline
- 1. Regional Trading Arrangements and the WTO
- 2. Existing Trading Arrangements Case of Sri
Lanka - - Broad summary of all agreements, Sri Lanka,
June 2005 (8-digit level) - 3. SAFTA Some issues of concern
- - Substantial trade
- - RoO
- 4. Sri Lankas FTAs with India and Pakistan
- 5. SAFTA Some of the Challenges
- 6. Moving forward/Conclusion
3Regional Trading Arrangementsand the WTO
- Non-discrimination is the cornerstone of
multilateral trading order as envisaged by the
MFN Principle (Article 1) and National Treatment
Principle (Article III) of GATT - MFN Principle allows an exception for regional
trade initiatives under the GATT Article XXIV and
the Enabling Clause GATS Article V with respect
to trade in services - According to Article XXIV there should be a plan
and schedule and substantially all the trade
should be included in the FTA arrangement
4Existing Trade Arrangements
- India Sri Lanka Free Trade Agreement
- Pakistan Sri Lanka Free Trade Agreement
- SAPTA
-
- SAFTA
- Generalized Scheme of Trade Preferences
- Bangkok Agreement
5Broad summary of all agreements, Sri Lanka June
2005 (8 digit level)
- ISFTA PSFTA SP B SL S GSTP BK
- Negative 1831 1145
- Free 2034 763 7 0 6 0 2 11
- Positive 2541 4498 194 25 155 5 86 297
- Note ISFTA-India Sri Lanka Free Trade Agreement
PSFTA-Pakistan Sri Lanka Free Trade Agreement,
SP-SAPTA for developing countries B-Bangladesh
SL-SAPTA LDC S-SAARC GSTP-Generalized Scheme of
Trade Preferences B-Bangkok Agreement - Source Authors calculations
6SAFTA Some issues of concern
- Substantial Trade
- 20 of tariff lines to be permitted for inclusion
for non-LDCs - Items high on the present trading list will most
likely be in the negative list (substantial
trade?) - Sensitive List to be reviewed every 4 yrs
- No commitment unlike ASEAN to phase out list
- This will make the effective protection very high
for those industries in the negative list and may
lead to inefficient sectors at a high cost to the
country
7SAFTA Some issues of concern (cont.)
- RoO
- RTAs require RoO to determine whether a
consignment of goods is eligible for preferential
treatment or not - Success of trading arrangement in terms of
net-trade creation and welfare would depend a
great deal on its RoO - RoO might force producers in the FTA to source
their inputs from high cost regional producers of
intermediateries - RoO can be used as a protectionist tool
- Has to be simple
8SAFTA Some issues of concern (cont.)
- RoO
- VA (percentage test)
- may create bias against efficient producers
more likely to have trade diversion - Change of tariff heading (CTH)
- origin? 4-digit or 6-digit? Eg. Tea
9Indo Lanka Free Trade Agreement
Sri Lanka
India
- 100 removal of tariffs on 1351 items upon entry
into force - 429 items in the negative list
- Rest 2797 items follow phased removal of tariffs
up to 100 Within 3 years - 25 reduction for textiles
- 50 fixed tariff concession for imports of tea
from Sri Lanka on a preferential basis annual
max. quota upto 15 mil. Kgs. - 50 fixed tariff concession for imports of
garments from Sri Lanka subject to max. annual
quota of 8 mil. pieces of which minimum of 6 mil.
pieces should contain Indian fabrics (no single
category should exceed 1.5 mil. pieces per annum)
- 100 removal of tariffs on 319 items upon entry
into force - 1180 items in the negative list
- 50 reduction in tariffs for 889 items upon entry
into force with phased out tariffs upto 70 at
the end of the 1st year 90 at the end of 2nd
year and 100 at the end of 3rd year - Remaining 2724 items removal of tariffs will be
phased out not less than 35 before the end of
the 3rd year not less than 70 before the end of
the 6th year not less than 100 before the end
of the 8th year
10Indo Lanka Free Trade Agreement (cont.)
- ROO criteria To receive tariff concessions, a
product should either be wholly obtained in a
country or should go through a substantial
transformation within a country, if it contains
any material imported from a third country. - In the FTA, the ROO criterion has been fixed at
35 per cent of FOB value. Hence, a product with
a minimum domestic value addition of 35 per cent
of the FOB value would become eligible for tariff
concessions to be sourced from any other country. - The ROO is further reduced to 25 per cent,
provided that the product exported from Sri Lanka
contains a minimum of 10 per cent content
originating from the importing country (as
imported from India).
11Indo Lanka Free Trade Agreement CEPA
- Widened to include more goods, and deepened to
improve market access through trade facilitation
and removal of non-tariff barriers - Agreement on trade in services
- Measures for promotion of investment in each
others countries - Enhance cooperation in areas such as education,
education, transportation and ICT.
12Pakistan - Sri Lanka FTA
Pakistan
Sri Lanka
- 100 tariff removal for 102 tariff lines upon
entry into force - 697 tariff lines on the negative list
- Will eliminate 4527 tariff lines of 5224 at
6-digit HS code over five years. 30 tariff
reduction by the end of the 1st year, 40 by the
2nd, 60 by the 3rd, 80 by the 4th and 100
after 5 years - TRQ for 6000MT of Basmathi rice and 1000MT of
potatoes free of duty per annum.
- 100 tariff removal for 206 tariff lines upon
entry into force - 540 tariff lines on the negative list
- Will eliminate the customs tariff on 4,680 tariff
lines out of a total of 5,224 tariff lines at
six-digit level, over a period of three years.
34 by the end of the 1st year, 64 by the 2nd
and 100 after three years. - Special Tariff Rate Quotas (TRQs)10,000 MT of
tea free of duty per annum 1200 Tons of betel
leaf per annum at preferential margin of 35 - TRQ of 35 duty concession for 200,000 pieces for
each of 21 categories of Sri Lankan Apparel
products without RoO on fabrics. - 20 preferential tariff margin on ceramic tiles
and tableware (No complete tariff elimination).
13Pakistan - Sri Lanka FTA (cont.)
- Rules of Origin require 35 domestic value
addition. Or 25 Sri Lankan value addition along
with 10 using Pakistani imports. - Investment and services will be drawn into the
process of liberalization with the CEPA.
14SAFTA Some of the Challenges
- Bilateral FTAs in South Asia
- Other more dynamic regional/bilateral deals
15Moving forward/Conclusion
- Negative lists not larger than bilateral negative
lists, negative lists should be phased out - ROO similar or better than bilateral with
regional cumulation - Importance of incorporating bilateral agreements
into SAFTA - No paratariffs or NTBs
- No TRQs
- Investment agreements to facilitate trade
- Trade facilitation
- Indias lead role
16Thank You