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    Indo-Lanka FTA study team arrives in Colombo

    November 25, 2014

    In a new development in the on-going Indo-Lanka trade dialogue, an independent survey team has arrived in Colombo to map barriers to FTA trade, and the first round of this ground-breaking bilateral study would conclude in early 2015.

    Commerce and Industry Minister Fished Bathiudeen said that after the FTA was entered into. bilateral trade improved tremendously. "I welcome your efforts to identify aspects where improvements are needed in our Free Trade dialogue" he further said in Colombo.

    Minister Bathiudeen was addressing the visiting independent study team from Indian led by Prof Binay Kumar Pattnaik (Director, Institute of Social and Economic Change (ISEC), Bangalore, India) recently in Colombo. Director Pattnaik is in town with his seven member team which is tasked by the Asia Foundation with the mapping of Non-Tariff Barriers in the historic Indo-Lanka FTA.


    "We are an independent, semi-government and Asia Foundation promoted study team consisting of three PhDs and other researchers from various Indian think tanks including Institute of Social and Economic Change (ISEC)".

     

    "I want to stress that this study is not done by the government of India but by autonomous research institutions in India including ISEC and Centre for Policy Research (CPR)" said Director Pattnaik and added: "Ever since we signed the FTA, there is substantial improvement in bilateral trade. We, as a study team, prefer to work on more specific issues in this study rather than of talking of broad trade policy issues. We want to identify areas of concern-in that, NTBs in the FTA process- so that they could be listed, rectified and workable solutions are devised. It is time this NTB issue is taken head-on! The findings of the first round of our study will be published in early 2015 after which we will select few focal areas to study in depth in the second round. We started this effort in May 2014 in India", he said.

     

    "At this moment our visit to Sri Lanka is a fact-finding one and we will return for bigger work. We already met with the Chamber of Commerce in Colombo and Department of Commerce through whom we will be speaking to Lankan exporters and importers to identify their issues. ISEC is the lead agency in the study along with CPR; On its part, ISEC itself has engaged five full time researchers on this study. The cost of first round is $20000."

    According to the Department of Commerce of Sri Lanka, India became the biggest product supplier to Sri Lanka in 2013, followed by China. Total trade 'under ISFTA' stood at $748.2 Mn and it jumped by a strong 40% in 2013 from 2012's $536 Mn.

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