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Time is
ripe for Indo-Pak trade ties to escalate
The News, Pakistan, February 19, 2012
Pakistan and India should seize
the opportunity of the recent visit of the Indian trade minister to
Pakistan and form it as the basis for a built-in agenda for enhancing
trade relations between the two neighbours, said Bipul Chatterjee,
Deputy Executive Director of CUTS International.
CUTS (Consumer Unity & Trust
Society) International is a non-governmental organisation pursuing
social justice and economic equity in India.
Chatterjee said, “The time is
ripe for India-Pakistan trade ties to escalate. A number of
forward-looking steps have taken during the recent visit of the Indian
trade minister to Pakistan”.
He added that the decision of
the Pakistani Cabinet to defer the modalities of doing trade with India
from its existing positive list approach to a negative list approach
should not be looked at pessimistically as that will happen over time
given the overall agenda of normalising trade relations between the two
countries.
He stressed on the importance of
five important decisions taken during this visit which will address
concerns about customary and procedural non-tariff measures affecting
trade between India and Pakistan.
Formal trade between the two
countries is about $3 billion per year, while its potential is huge, he
said. Some estimates say that trade can be enhanced to $10 billion per
year including formalisation of informal trade via third countries if
some significant non-tariff measures are addressed, he added.
The importance of easing visa
rules, simplification of customs procedures, mutual recognition of each
other’s standards, institution of a body to deal with trade-related
grievances, and opening of bank branches in each other country is to be
looked as part of a built-in agenda for incremental improvement in trade
relations, Chatterjee added. Normalisation of Indo-Pak trade relations
will also have a significant positive boost to regional trade
integration in South Asia.
In the past, troughs in Indo-Pak
trade relations is known to have affected the progress of regional
initiative for trade liberalisation, both countries being the largest
member states of the South Asian Free Trade Agreement (SAFTA), he
stated.
During the 17th Summit of South
Asian Association for Regional Cooperation held in Maldives in November
2011, the participating Heads of State of SAARC members had renewed
their commitments to cut down their respective sensitive lists
containing products which are kept out of bounds from tariff reduction
programme under SAFTA. On this subject, with support from The Asia
Foundation and in partnership with a group of like-minded organisation
from among South Asian countries, CUTS International has recently done a
study on Cost of Economic Non-Cooperation to Consumers in South Asia,
Chatterjee said.
The study estimates that
consumers will benefit from access to cheaper products if SAFTA
facilitates more open trade between the regional economies. Minimum gain
in terms of annual savings on account of overpriced imports from outside
the region would be $2 billion.
In about 355 excluded products
listed by SAFTA members, there exist very strong prospects for higher
regional trade if preferential tariff rates under the Agreement are
applied to them. The study found that trade between India and Pakistan
has highest growth prospect, he said.
India and Pakistan together
stand to save a minimum of 55 percent of their import bills on about 200
product categories, reducing the consumption expenditure in both
countries by more than $800 million per year, he said.
While a large share of gains to
Indian consumers will be through Pakistani exports in plastic based
articles, minerals and mineral fuels, Indian exports in pharmaceutical
ingredients and electrical equipment will significantly reduce the
import burden of Pakistan, Chatterjee added.
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