Title: Regional Trade Agreements in South Asia: Trade and Conflict
1Regional Trade Agreements in South Asia Trade
and Conflict
October 16th, 2006 Sustainable Development
Policy Institute
2Study parameters and questions
- Three questions
- Do RTAs promote trade?
- Do RTAs mitigate or promote conflict?
- If neither, then how is conflict addressed?
- Literature and Research Answers
- There is a need to look at conflict mitigation as
part of a larger regional integration process
which includes both economic and non economic
factors.
3Conflict in South Asia Political Stability
4Conflict in South Asia
- Interstate conflict
- 1985 India-Bangladesh - Muhurichar Island
conflict - 1987 India-Sri Lanka - Indian Peace Keeping
Force (IKPF) sent to Tamil Nadu to disarm the
Tamils - 1988 India-Nepal - Transit Treaty issue leads to
escalating tensions between the two countries - 1989 India-Sri Lanka - Withdrawal of IPKF
demanded by Sri Lankan government - 1991 India-Sri Lanka - India boycotts SAARC
Colombo summit - 1998 India-Pakistan - Both countries test
nuclear weapons - 1999 India-Pakistan - Kargil conflict in
Indian-held Kashmir - 2001 India-Bangladesh - Pyrdiwah village border
conflict - 2002 India - Terrorist attack on Indian
parliament blamed on Pakistan, leads to both
amassing troops along the border
5Intra-state conflict
- Intra-state conflict
- 1983 Sri Lanka - Widespread anti-Tamil rioting
following the deaths of soldiers in an LTTE
ambush - 1984 India P.M. Indira Gandhi killed by Sikh
body guards after ordering troops to attack Sikh
militants from Amritsar - 1988 Maldives - Attempted coup thwarted (India
assisted) - 1990 India - Kashmiri separatist movement gains
momentum - 1992 India - Hindu-Muslim riots in Ayodhya
following the demolition of Babri Mosque - 1993 Sri Lanka - President Premadasa killed in
LTTE attack - 1999 Pakistan - Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif
ousted in military coup led by General Pervez
Musharraf - 2000 Nepal Maoist uprising continues to impact
state - 2001 India Naxalite uprisings within various
states - 2004 Pakistan - Waziristan and Balochistan
conflict
6Mapping South Asian RTAs The formal structure
SAARC Integration, regional cooperation and
non-trade issues
SAPTA
SAFTA
7The evolution of RTAs
- The South Asian Association for Regional
Cooperation (SAARC) the first regional
cooperation agreement in South Asia, was formed
in December 1985 - The South Asian Preferential Trade Agreement
(SAPTA) agreement was signed on April 11, 1993
and entered into force on December 07, 1995, - The South Asian Free Trade Agreement (SAFTA)
agreement was signed during the twelfth SAARC
summit in Islamabad on January 06, 2004. - It was supposed to enter into full force, but has
not since due to political wrangling.
8Trade concessions from SAPTA to SAFTA
- Under SAPTA, concessions on tariff, para-tariff
and non-tariff measures were negotiated
step-by-step and followed a product-by-product
approach. - The SAFTA agreement provides for multilateral
concessions. Further, it seeks to completely
eliminate barriers to trade by instituting a free
trade regime.
9Trade/Economic complementarities
- Volume of informal trade exceeds legal trade
- Shows that complementarities exist and could
result in the unleashing of value added trade. - Tariffs, quotas, bans and disputes over sensitive
lists for LDCs are trade inhibitors. - Potential for leveraging, investment, joint
ventures and the enabling institutional
arrangements - Problem is, that this competes with growing extra
regional aspirations. - Even if trade between SAARC nations grows, it
will do so at a relatively small proportion of
total trade. - Inter and Intra state implications from dealing
with conflict.
10From trade to conflict A recap and a question
- South Asia is conflict-ridden
- Trade complementarities exist in the region
- The RTAs are designed to capture these
complementarities - Language in the RTA has both inter and
intra-state security implications
11Bilateral inhibitors of trade under SAARC
- The planned 1989 SAARC summit in Colombo was
postponed due to Sri Lankan opposition to the
presence of the Indian Peace-keeping Force (IPKF)
on the Island at the time. - The disintegration of the USSR placed concepts
like ethnic rights, the right to
self-determination and human rights higher up on
national agendas. - The India-Pakistan conflict over Kashmir rose in
profile - India and Sri Lanka went head to head in the
on-going struggle for Tamil Eelam - India and Bangladesh developed differences over
the Farakka Barrage - India contested Nepals assertion of greater
political and economic independence.
12Bilateral inhibitors of trade under SAARC
- During the 1990s, when economic circumstances
were favorable to progress under SAPTA, political
differences between Pakistan and India stalled
progress. - Throughout the 1990s, India blamed Pakistan for
supporting an armed insurgency in Kashmir thus
creating domestic instability within Indian
Kashmir. - In 1998, Pakistan and India declared themselves
nuclear weapon states which led to major military
crises in 1999 and 2002. Differences between
Pakistan and India were the major factor that led
to a delay in finalizing SAFTA. - The initial finalization deadline for the
Agreement was 2001 (later revised to the current
deadline of 1 January, 2006).
13What drives peace?
- RTAs have been unable to develop economic
momentum due to persisting regional tensions and
their ability to proactively mitigate conflict
has been limited. - However, concurrent bilateral processes are in
evidence which aim to promote political
stability. - This however, leads to sub regionalism (SAGQ)
which may then lead to trade inequities which
will hinder progress on trade integration. - Implicitly, equitable trade must combine with
other aspects and avenues of cooperation in order
to build peace.
14The Impact of External Influences
- India-Pakistan Conflation of events post 9/11
driving composite dialogue - US interest in Central Asia - Afghanistan
- Nuclear instability, the terrorist threat in
South Asia - India-Sri-Lanka
- Norwegian/World Bank/Asian Bank efforts to
promote the LTTE-Sri Lankan peace process - India-Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh
- The Sino-Indian territorial dispute sustains
Chinas interest in the region - Maintains political, economic and diplomatic
relations with other South Asian countries to
neutralize Indias coercive diplomacy and
maintain a balnce in the region - As a SAARC observer China may take on a formal
role in conflict mitigation
15Summary of 3 Initial Questions
- Do RTAs promote trade?
- Yes, but as a small percentage of extra regional
trade, the political benefits in peace building
cannot be heard over the noise of larger partners - Need to cut through the real barriers that would
harness trade - Tariff barriers
- Non tariff barriers
- Sensitivity lists
- Protectionism
- Many continue to accuse India of protectionism
which has to stop. - Real benefits not being felt by all
16Summary of 3 Initial Questions
- Do RTAs promote/mitigate conflict?
- Mixed
- Inequitable trade can contribute to intra state
conflict (regions that are left behind find
meaning in social movements, reverse nationalism,
ethnicity, etc.) - Equitable trade can mitigate conflict but only as
part of a series of non economic factors that
need to be addressed (political dynamic, etc. - Trade between adjacent regions can generate real
benefits for real people. - How is conflict addressed?
- Reality within globalization a mix of
internal/external forces - Threats are from the institutionalization of
conflict where too many gain from the reality
of conflict.
17A look into the future
- Continuing with SAARC.
- Resolving outstanding non economic disputes
- Shared resource management
- Using social capital for peace
- Sustained external pressure for peace/equitable
trade - Bilateralism
- Tension between neighbors and India continue as
benefits from trade are one sided and India
imposes its will - Pakistan understands this and refuses to behave
like a Sri Lanka or Bangladesh and more so like a
China. - Encourage real cross border trade
- Rajasthan Sindh, Bangladesh West Bengal,
Punjab x 2
18A look into the future
- Non economic Bilateral to economic Regional
- Sectoral inter dependence to Regional integration
- Benefit sharing between adjacent communities
- Benefit sharing beyond urban centers
19Questions
20Regional Dynamics
21Regional Dynamics Foundation Building
22Regional Dynamics Trade Channels
23Regional Dynamics Economic Growth
24Regional Dynamics Political Influence
25Regional Dynamics Bilateral Agreements
26Regional Dynamics Urban Rural Development
27Regional Dynamics Inter State Conflict
28Regional Dynamics Intra State Conflict
29Regional Dynamics Equitable sub regionalism
30Regional Dynamics Adjacent development
31Regional Dynamics Intra State Conflict