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SAFTA India-Pakistan-Afghanistan Trade

SAFTA India-Pakistan-Afghanistan Trade. India Development Foundation. Harsh Vivek February 1, 2006 – Taj Mahal Palace and Towers, Mumbai. The Presentation Agenda. SAFTA Trade: India-Pak-Afghan Customs duties The way forward. Why regional trade?. More integrated markets

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SAFTA India-Pakistan-Afghanistan Trade

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  1. SAFTAIndia-Pakistan-Afghanistan Trade India Development Foundation Harsh Vivek February 1, 2006 – Taj Mahal Palace and Towers, Mumbai

  2. The Presentation Agenda SAFTA Trade: India-Pak-Afghan Customs duties The way forward

  3. Why regional trade? • More integrated markets • Benefits of trade multipliers in the region • Intra-bloc trade – ‘cluster approach to development’ • Exploit trade complementarities of neighbouring countries • Cooperate to compete (India-China energy example) • Price competitiveness of intra-bloc trade • More benefits (relatively) to small countries in intra-bloc trade • E.g. Sri Lanka gaining relatively more from India-Sri Lanka trade

  4. SAFTA • SAFTA Agreement – “Strengthen intra-SAARC economic cooperation to maximize the realization of the region’s potential for trade.” • Governed by WTO principles • Reciprocity, special and differential treatment • Awareness of the needs of least developed members (Revenue Compensation Mechanism) • Focus on elimination of tariff and non-tariff barriers • Two institutions to oversee implementation • SAFTA Ministerial Council (highest decision-making body) • Committee of Experts (senior economic official from each member-state) • Role of the SAARC Secretariat (?)

  5. Tariffs and Non-tariff barriers • Tariffs (10 year phase-out of tariffs) • Least developed members reduce tariffs to a maximum of 30 per cent (in first 2 years). • Tariffs already below 30 per cent will be reduced by 5 per cent annually for least developed members • Non-least developed members reduce tariffs to a maximum of 20 per cent (first 2 years) • Tariffs already below 20 per cent will be reduced by 10 per cent annually for non-least developed members • Non-tariff barriers – QRs eliminated for products not on sensitive-list

  6. The Presentation Agenda SAFTA Trade: India-Pak-Afghan Customs duties The way forward

  7. Contribution to SAARC trade (2001)

  8. Trade within SAARC as a per cent of trade with Asia and the World

  9. India’s trade with SAARC

  10. Share of developing and Asian countries in India’s trade

  11. Country profile of tariff structure

  12. Trade with Pakistan • Bilateral trade a precursor to peace and security in the region • Economic-ties: a good confidence-building measure • Dramatic increase in trade between India and Pakistan – 76 per cent growth in 2004-2005 • More than USD 600 million (2004-05), likely to cross USD 1 billion by 2005-2006 • Exist complementarities in many sectors in the two countries (agri-business, textiles, auto-components, engineering and tourism)

  13. Pakistan import list / India export list Electric and power machinery Iron-ore, pig iron Medicine and pharma products Organic chemicals, pesticides and insecticides Rubber tyres Pulp and paper Pakistan export list/ India import list Animal hides and skins Raw cotton Edible nuts Metal scrap Precious and semi-precious stones Jewelry List of export-import commodities Source: International Trade Statistics Yearbook (2001), United Nations

  14. Composition of India-Pak trade • Major trade in mfg. goods (60 per cent) • Bulk trade in agriculture and allied products • Sugar and onions (recent examples) • Good potential for increase in trade • Textiles • Petroleum

  15. Trade in agriculture commodities

  16. Trade in engineering goods

  17. Afghanistan’s trade • Trade suffered a setback due to prolonged strife, civil wars and political turmoil • Total exports to India and Pakistan (2004) – USD 150 million (approx) • Bulk of Afghanistan’s exports go to Pakistan (69 per cent in 2004) • India (8%) and Russia (6%) other major trading partners • Imports from a larger number of countries

  18. Afghanistan trade destinations

  19. Composition of Afghan. trade (2004)

  20. The Presentation Agenda SAFTA Trade: India-Pak-Afghan Customs duties The way forward

  21. Customs Valuation • Indian Customs requires extensive documentation. • Processing delays often due to complex tariff structure and multiple exemptions, which may vary according to product or user.

  22. Customs Valuation • On an average, documents required for importing or exporting one consignment in/out of India includes: Source: An UN ESCAP estimate.

  23. SAFTA - % of Tariff Cut • The tariff concessions varied in depth from 5-100 % • The tariff cuts offered by India have been the deepest, varying from 25-100 % for LDCs and 10-90 % for all countries • The other countries offered much milder tariff cuts ranging from 7.5-10 to15-20 % for all countries (except Sri Lanka, which offered cuts up to 75 %)

  24. SAFTA - Tariff Structure • Provides free trade in goods • The Agreement does not look at trade in services • The issue of cross-border investments is also not dealt with strongly in the Agreement • Each SAFTA nation will maintain a Sensitive List to protect the interests of the domestic stakeholders • The Agreement also provides for an institutional mechanism of the SAFTA Ministerial Council (SMC) • Detailed Dispute Settlement Mechanism (on the lines of the WTO) • Proper documentation, case based on scientific, verifiable evidences

  25. India’s Trade with SAFTA Nations

  26. India's Market among SAFTA Nations • India’s Market in SAARC for it’s Major Export Commodities

  27. The Presentation Agenda SAFTA Trade: India-Pak-Afghan Customs and transit rights The way forward

  28. The Way Forward • Need to strengthen the Agreement • Expanding the scope to include trade in services • Focus on cross-border investments • Simplification of trade procedures and documentation • Strengthening the implementation of the Agreement – focus on trade reforms in SAARC • Involvement of international organisations • Harmonizing tariffs and standards between nations • Working-out a compensation mechanism for the revenue loss by the least developed countries in the region

  29. In conclusion… “The success of SAFTA greatly depends on the political commitment and harmony among all the signatory members, and on the vigour and vision with which India and Pakistan – the two largest economies in the region – lead meaningful trade reforms.”

  30. Thank you.www.idfresearch.orghvivek@idfresearch.org

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