Lanka-Pakistan FTA widening

  • Lanka-Pakistan bilateral trade talks conclude in Colombo
  • โ€˜Our PM Shariffโ€™s Jan-โ€™16 visit a turning point for tradeโ€™-Pakistani Minister Khan
  • โ€˜Growing, but can expand moreโ€™-Rishad
  • Bilateral trade at $354 Mn
  • โ€˜Coming few weeks excitingโ€™-Pakistani Minister Khan
  • โ€˜Identified issuesโ€™-Rishad

Sri Lankaโ€“Pakistan historic bilateral trade positioned for a new high in the aftermath of official bilateral trade meet closing successfully on 11 November in Colombo-and more importantly, the historic Pakistan – Lanka Free Trade Agreement (PSFTA) is now set to widen-big time. โ€œThe impetus to this economic engagement also comes from the fact that Prime Minister Nawaz Shariff is scheduled to begin the new-year 2016 with his first visit, to Colombo! The coming 8-10 weeks are very challenging and exciting for our bilateral trade. The forthcoming change to historic PSFTA is a new phase in our bilateral economic engagement. It deepens our economic and trade relationship creating this new phase in our engagementโ€ said an upbeat Engr. Khuram Dastgir Khan (Minister of Commerce of Pakistan) on 11 November in Colombo.

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Pakistani Commerce Minister Khan was addressing the bilateral trade meeting between Sri Lanka and Pakistan held in Colombo on 11 November at Kingsbury Hotel. Joining Minister Khan at this in-depth trade session were Maj General Syed Shakeel Hussain (HE High Commissioner of Pakistan to Colombo), Dr. Sarfraz Ahmed Khan Sipra (Deputy High Commissioner of Pakistan in Sri Lanka), Pakistani Commerce officials and several Pakistani business delegates accompanying Minister Khan. Sri Lankan side lead by Minister Bathiudeen was joined by T. M. K. B. Tennekoon (Secretary, Ministry of Industry and Commerce), Sonali Wijeratne (Director General, Department of Commerce), Indira Malwatte (Chairperson-EDB), officials from Customs, BoI, Treasury, ICTA, other relevant line ministries such as Ministries of Agriculture, Strategic Development & International Trade and Foreign Affairs.

โ€œSri Lanka and Pakistan are friends-it comes from our heart. This friendship should now become a deep and longstanding economic partnership. I congratulate Minister Bathiudeen for inviting me to Sri Lanka in this regard. Both Minister Bathiudeen and I will convey to all our respective departments in bilateral trade that these initiatives and this trade relationship between us is special and -we want them to ring-fence it from temporary considerationsโ€ said Pakistan Commerce Minister Khan and added: โ€œMany sensitivities can arise but we need to realise that this is a relationship for long term, particularly in terms of new challenges that have arisen in the form of mega regional trade agreements such as the recent Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) โ€“we need to understand that we cannot wait for too long to deepen our bilateral engagement, otherwise our markets will be taken by competitors. We have to conclude our bilateral arrangements and then go for joint ventures in both countries so that we start exporting to third countries-in that we both join together in both value chains and supply chains to export to third countries. We offer to Sri Lanka our confluence of being able to give access to South Asia, Central Asia and West Asia while Sri Lanka opens the East Asian trade doors for Pakistan. Thatโ€™s the broader foundation of this relationship! We need to give administrative solutions for short term trade issues and also longer term agreements formalising our short term understanding. The impetus to this economic engagement also comes from the fact that Prime Minister Nawaz Shariff is scheduled to begin the new-year 2016 with his first visit, to Colombo! Therefore Minister Bathiudeen and I have lots of work in the few weeks left till his visit to ensure to our leaderships that we can offer substantive steps to formalise and sign at Prime Minister Shariffโ€™s visit. The coming 8-10 weeks therefore are very challenging and exciting for our bilateral trade. The forthcoming change to historic PSFTA is a new phase in our bilateral economic engagement. It deepens our economic and trade relationship creating this new phase in our engagement. A wider range of items under FTA to be offered duty free. And many items with quotas would become quota free and duty free. Another reason for the excitement is due to Pakistan holding the Single Country Exhibition after a lapse of many years in Colombo in January 2016 coinciding with Prime Minister Shariffโ€™s visit.โ€

At present, more than 4000 product lines from Sri Lanka have duty free access to Pakistani market under the Pakistan Sri Lanka FTA. This number of product lines is expected to expand as per Pakistani Minister Khanโ€™s announcement on 11 November.

Minister Bathiudeen, in his brief opening remarks, said: โ€œThe multi-faceted relationship between our two nations has added more value and strength by Your Excellencyโ€™s arrival. There is no doubt that greater economic integration between our two nations should be welcomed. In this context, we should strive to maximize our trade potential under existing FTA that will eventually guide and compel us to go to the next level in trade and investment. The value of our total trade that stood at $ 97 million in 2001 increased to peak levels by 2013 recording US$ 462mn. But we believe there is great unrealised trade potential between the two countries despite the FTA and it is time we move forward. We identified some trade issues and Pakistani High Commission too submitted some issues for todayโ€™s discussions.โ€

The value of total Lanka-Pakistan bilateral trade that stood at $97 Mn in 2001 increased to peak levels by 2013 to $ 462 Mn and in 2014 levelled at $354 Mn. Since the start of the FTA, Sri Lanka-Pakistan overall trade has surged by four times, exports to Pakistan have increased by three-fold while imports from Pakistan have grown by four-fold. Pakistan is now the second largest export destination for Sri Lanka in South Asia accounting for 10% of Sri Lankaโ€™s exports to South Asia. Sri Lankaโ€™s exports to Pakistan totalled $ 74.25 Mn in 2014 while imports from Pakistan stood at $279.59 Mn in the same year. Despite steady growth-except in 2014-the Balance of Trade remains mostly in favour of Pakistan.

The first ever FTA Pakistan signed with any foreign economy was with Sri Lanka in 2002 -which came into force in 2005.

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