KARACHI: The Joint Action Plan signed last week by Pakistan and the US in Washington under Trade and Investment Framework Agreement (Tifa) is more of a goodwill gesture than anything concrete that can benefit this country by boosting the quantum of trade, according to experts.
“There is no point in looking for something
that is not there. It was more of a routine exchange of pleasantries
between economic diplomats of the two countries. If you insist on
imagining apple falling in your lap that’s your wish, but it has little
to do with the reality.
“The relationship between the #US and
#Pakistan is more complicated than its perception,” a trade expert,
currently in Brussels, told Dawn over telephone.
“The US Congress
is hostile to the idea of patronising Pakistan as the majority of its
members judge the South Asian nation as ‘irresponsible and
unpredictable’. It did not reauthorise GSP scheme that expired in
December 2013.”
Another economic diplomacy watcher in Islamabad
observed: “It even shot down its own government’s proposal of
reconstruction opportunity zones (ROZs) in troubled Northern Areas of
Pakistan in 2012. I see no reason why would it concede trade concessions
for a greater market access to Pakistan,”
The idea of ROZs was
floated by the US to fight extremism in Northern Areas of Pakistan with
economic development. It was argued that the trade concession to
companies operating from Fata and adjoining regions will raise the
opportunity cost of joining the ranks of militants for youths of the
region.
“The proposal was a non-starter from the word go. It is
not rocket science. When investors are shy to invest in Karachi and
Lahore who in his right mind would climb mountains to invest in the war
zone?” a CEO of a star Pakistani company commented at a joint business
meeting in Karachi at one point.
Some executives heading US
companies in Pakistan rejected what they termed a ‘subjective view’ of
doomsayers. “The business circles saw the inking of agreement
positively. The corporate Pakistan pins great value to warmer relations
between Pakistan and the US. They consider it crucial for stability and
progress,” a business leader told Dawn.
“It is not just the
future of democracy that hinges on economic development but the fortunes
of Afghanistan will also rise and fall with Pakistan. The danger of
Afghanistan slipping back to civil war is real and Pakistan’s role in
achieving peace and stability can’t be overlooked,” commented a
political scientist in Lahore.
“Pakistan’s role is critical in
preserving the gains of US intervention and in rebuilding and
reconstruction process,” he explained.
“Instead of finger
pointing and focusing on finding faults in the government’s initiatives
we need to learn to appreciate. Khurram Dastagir is a motivated commerce
minister keen to deliver development through export promotion,” a
retired bureaucrat who moves in power circles in Islamabad defended
Nawaz’s choice.
Shahid Javed Burki, currently in Washington,
expressed skepticism about the government’s approach towards the issue
of trade with the US. “The slogan of ‘trade not aid’ does not appeal to
economic reasoning in case of cash-strapped Pakistan. A dollar earned
through export is not worth more than a dollar a country gets in aid.
The insistence of Pakistan for greater market access in the US may not
yield expected results,” he argued.
“Top five items of exports
from Pakistan to the US belong to leather and textile group where demand
is currently stagnant and expected to fall in future. There is a limit
to number of shirts and shoes an aging US population can consume.”
He believes that US may respond more warmly if Pakistan curbs intellectual property rights violations.
“Finally,
the ‘gravity model of trade’ suggests thrust towards intra-regional
trade. It would perhaps be more fruitful if Pakistan consolidates its
trade ties in Asia, instead of eying distant markets,” he concluded.
On
May 13, Commerce Minister Khurram Dastagir Khan and US Trade
Representative Ambassador Michael Froman at a meeting of Tifa signed a
mutually agreed action plan to enhance trade and investment flows over
the next five years.
Following areas have been identified for
cooperative efforts in the plan:
1. diversifying agricultural
production;
2. enhancing intellectual property protection;
3.
implementing the World Trade Organisation Trade Facilitation Agreement;
4. engaging on Pakistan’s accession to the WTO Government Procurement
Agreement;
5. increasing trade in services;
6. outreach to US State and
Local Governments;
7. promoting entrepreneurship; and 8. increasing
dialogue between the respective private sectors.
According to the
official data, total volume of trade between the US and Pakistan in
calendar year 2013 was $5.3 billion. The balance was in favour of
Pakistan that exports $3.7bn worth of merchandise and the value of
imports from the US totals $1.6 bn. The foreign direct investment has
declined to a fraction of what it was in mid-2000. In 2005 it was over
$1.5bn whereas last year it was around $200 million.
Source: Dawn News
Source: Dawn News
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