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tariff to increase trade
South Asia should cut tariff to
increase trade
The Daily Star, February
3, 2009
By Refayet Ullah Mirdha
South Asian leaders should reach a
consensus on downsizing tariffs to boost intra-regional trade, which
will ultimately help cut poverty, now running deep in the region,
says a trade analyst.
But it is not an easy task, Saman
Kelegama, executive director of Colombo-based Institute of Policy
Studies (IPS) in Sri Lanka, says in an exclusive interview with The
Daily Star.
Consensus-building comes from hard
work and continuous negotiations, but the task is not impossible, he
says. Many loggerhead trade issues were resolved through
negotiations among leaders worldwide, according to Kelegama.
Kelegama, a policy pundit, visited
Dhaka to attend the two-day seminar on "Mainstreaming Inter-national
Trade into National Development and A Southern Agenda on Global
Trade Governance", organised by the South Asian Network on Economic
Modelling (SANEM) and CUTS International at Dhaka Sheraton Hotel.
Kelegama refers to a consensus
reached in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), which
is not far away.
Kelegama says Asean took some
important decisions to boost trade within member nations through
negotiations, although four members are directly recognised as the
least developed countries (LDCs).
He suggests the South Asian leaders
come forward to remove all barriers to increase trade volume for
poverty reduction, as a significant number of people in this region
still live under the poverty line.
The South Asian region can hardly
reap the benefits of global trade, as the countries have limited
negotiating skills, he says.
Since the South Asian leaders could
not reach a consensus on different issues, they have failed to
demonstrate a unified strength in global trade negotiations such as
at the World Trade Organisation (WTO), Kelegama says.
The analyst is all for fair trade,
not for free trade, to benefit from the global trade practices.
"We need fair trade, not free
trade," Kelegama says. He backs restricted movement of capital, not
free movement of capital.
Foreign entrepreneurs tend to
invest in some rosy sectors such as power and telecoms if
governments allow free movement of capital out of their countries.
"The investors are interested to invest in those sectors as they get
easy returns,” he says.
Asked to comment on a failed plan
by Indian industrial conglomerate TATA to invest in power,
fertiliser and steel sectors, Kelegama declines to comment.
Kelegama says some countries in
South Asian face problems with an unfair tariff structure of the
global trading system, as it has not been addressed efficiently
until now.
"We need a regional consensus to
address the unfair tariff structure in the WTO," Kelegama says.
Bangladesh paid the same amount of
tariff as France, for exporting goods to the EU, even though
Bangladesh is one of the LDCs.
"It's just unfair."
Bangladesh paid $510 million in
tariff for exporting goods to the EU, while France also paid the
same amount to the EU in fiscal 2007-08, but the volume of trade
between Bangladesh and the EU, compared to France, is insignificant.
It is the time to rethink the
export of human resources from South Asian nations, as remittance is
one of the pillars of the economies in this region, he says.
"Capital can move freely worldwide,
so can human resources," Kelegama says. The leaders of this region
should address the issues in the WTO.
According to Kelegama, developed
countries always prefer to recruit skilled workers from the LDCs and
developing countries, which is not always right.
Urging leaders of this region to
expedite the discussion of the WTO's MODE-4, Kelegama says the
developed countries should also come forward to recruit unskilled
workers.
He says although the movement of
"natural persons" (MODE-4) under the General Agreement on Trade in
Services (GATS) ensures the movement of human resources for trade in
services worldwide, the South Asian leaders are not utilising such
potentials.
Kelegama particularly mentions the
role of India in spearheading the MODE-4 discussions to open a new
window of opportunity for the skilled and unskilled workers of this
region.
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at:
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