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A Closer South Asia: Re-energizing Regional Economic Integration and Connectivity 6 th South Asia Economic Summit, Colombo, 2 September 2013 Nagesh Kumar
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6th SAES - Presentation by Nagesh Kumar (UNESCAP SRO-SSWA) - 'A Closer South Asia'

Jan 02, 2016

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6th SAES - Presentation by Nagesh Kumar (UNESCAP SRO-SSWA) - 'A CLoser South Asia: Re-energizing Regional Economic Integration and Connectivity'. Day 1 (2nd September 2013), Special Event

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Page 1: 6th SAES - Presentation by Nagesh Kumar (UNESCAP SRO-SSWA) - 'A Closer South Asia'

A Closer South Asia: Re-energizing Regional Economic Integration

and Connectivityand Connectivity

6th South Asia Economic Summit,

Colombo, 2 September 2013

Nagesh Kumar

Page 2: 6th SAES - Presentation by Nagesh Kumar (UNESCAP SRO-SSWA) - 'A Closer South Asia'

Relevance of regionalism in South Asia

• Rise of economics of neighbourhood– Regionalism to exploit the potential of efficiency-seeking industrial restructuring, economies

of vertical specialization and regional value chains

• Regionalism for more balanced and equitable development – relatively smaller and poorer economies grow faster because of production

restructuring; economic convergencerestructuring; economic convergence

• Regionalism emerged as a dominant trend in the world economy – with EU, NAFTA, MERCOSUR, CARICOM, SACU, ASEAN, ECO, RCEP, TPP……

• Changed new external context since the onset of 2008/09 crisis• Business-as-usual not an option

• Stalemate in WTO negotiations

• As a late starter, the region has many underexploited opportunities for regional economic integration

• More effective for addressing shared vulnerabilities and risks

• An integrated South Asia will be able to play its due role in emerging broader regionalism in Asia and the Pacific

Page 3: 6th SAES - Presentation by Nagesh Kumar (UNESCAP SRO-SSWA) - 'A Closer South Asia'

Global economic integration but little diversification

• South Asian countries emerged as dynamic players in the world economy

– Total trade expected to triple from nearly $10 trillion to nearly $3 trillion by 2017

• Much of the export growth over the past decade benefited from expansion of global demand

9261501

2856

4508

0

1000

2000

3000

4000

5000

SAARC SSWA

Total trade, US$ billion

2011 2017

demand

• Have not fully exploited opportunities of export expansion through product diversification and moving up the value chain

– High concentration on few product lines and few markets, especially the LDCs

• Regional cooperation for moving up the value chain in sectors of common interest

– Garments, tea

– Leverage the Indian leadership to make South Asia as a bpo hub

– Coordination in global trade negotiations and for seeking their concerns

3

2011 2017

-50%

-30%

-10%

10%

30%

50%

70%

90%

110%

Market effect Growth effect Product effect Competitiveness effect

Page 4: 6th SAES - Presentation by Nagesh Kumar (UNESCAP SRO-SSWA) - 'A Closer South Asia'

Unexploited potential of regional economic

integration• Bulk of intraregional trade potential remains

unexploited in SAARC – Intraregional exports in 2017 could be $72

billion

• Barriers to realization of intraregional trade– Significant informal trade; estimated $10 billion in

2011– Poor connectivity and trade facilitation: high trade

costscosts– Poor supply capabilities in LDCs

• Multiple overlapping frameworks for regional economic cooperation

– ECO, SAARC, BIMSTEC– Bilateral and trilateral initiatives: Bangladesh,

India and Nepal; India-Nepal, India-Bhutan, Pakistan-Afghanistan; India-Sri Lanka, Pakistan-Sri Lanka, among others

• Significant potential of welfare gains especially for the poorer countries from SAFTA

• India-Sri Lanka FTA has helped in balanced expansion of bilateral trade

• Recent developments have been helpful– India eliminating SAFTA sensitive list for LDCs– Pakistan-India trade moving towards negative list/ MFN

4

Page 5: 6th SAES - Presentation by Nagesh Kumar (UNESCAP SRO-SSWA) - 'A Closer South Asia'

Exploiting the potential of regional economic

integration• Expediting the implementation of RTAs

• Exploiting the potential of trade in services

• Liberalization of trade under SATIS

• Facilitating intraregional investments

• Early adoption of SAARC agreement on protection and promotion of investments

• Strengthening cross-border banking and financial links

• Capital raising and development finance

• Facilitating cross-border listings

• SAARC Development Fund to catalyze cross-border infrastructure investments

• SAARC, ECO and BIMSTEC consultations and coordination

• Long-term vision and target-setting

• Transport connectivity and trade facilitation

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Page 6: 6th SAES - Presentation by Nagesh Kumar (UNESCAP SRO-SSWA) - 'A Closer South Asia'

Towards seamless

connectivity• South Asia better connected with Europe

than with itself

• Poorly developed land routes

• Case for integrated transport corridors

across the subregional groupings to

maximize network externalities

• Major gains from integrating ECO-

TIPI-BM highway corridor

(TUR-IRN-PAK-IND-BGD-MMR)

• Major gains from integrating ECO-

SAARC-BIMSTEC transport corridors:

• 2 proposals• TIPI-BM Highway Corridor• ITI-DKD Container Train

• Each country becomes a hub for each other, region as a hub of East-West trade

• Transport corridors generate economic activity, generate employment and reduce poverty

• Easier to mobilize resources for infrastructure in a broader regional framework with improved viability

• Could be developed following a building block

approach

• Need for a regional transit transport

agreement

Istanbul-Tehran-Islamabad--Delhi-Kolkata-Dhaka (ITI-DKD) Railway Cargo Corridor

Page 7: 6th SAES - Presentation by Nagesh Kumar (UNESCAP SRO-SSWA) - 'A Closer South Asia'

Regional cooperation for food security and

sustainable agriculture• A hunger hotspot:

• South Asia is net food exporter but has one third of food insecure people and over half of underweight children

• Rising food prices because of supply side factors e.g. crop failures, rising

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side factors e.g. crop failures, rising cost of inputs, speculation in commodities, biofuel conversion etc.

• Need for a second green revolution based on sustainable agriculture

• Regional cooperation in agricultural R&D for such a green revolution

• Regional food banks/ seed banks

• Cooperation in sharing weather forecasts, addressing pests, vet. diseases

Page 8: 6th SAES - Presentation by Nagesh Kumar (UNESCAP SRO-SSWA) - 'A Closer South Asia'

Beginning to exploit potential of regional

cooperation for energy security

Energy security challenges• Exponentially growing demand,

energy poverty, lack of supplies, poor energy infrastructure

• High import dependence for fossil fuels

South and South-West Asia Energy interconnections• High import dependence for fossil

fuels

• Complementarities across region in terms of demand- supply mismatches which can be optimized through grid connections and cross-country pipelines

• Some energy interconnections have taken place, some are in process

• Development of regional energy markets in SSWA through creation of regional energy grids and cross-country pipelines as a part of the incipient Asian Energy Highway

8

Turkey

Islamic Republic

of Iran

Afghanistan

Pakistan

Maldives

IndiaSri Lanka

Nepal

Bhutan

Bangladesh

Central Asia Exports

Exports & Imports

Proposed connection

Page 9: 6th SAES - Presentation by Nagesh Kumar (UNESCAP SRO-SSWA) - 'A Closer South Asia'

Regional solutions for disaster risk reduction

Islamic Republic Afghanistan

Bangladesh

ECO SAARC BIMSTEC

Environment

and Disaster

Management

Cooperation

framework

2006 – call for

regional early warning

programmes/ disaster

preparedness

Male Declaration for

Early Warning,

Disaster

Management and

Disaster Prevention

framework

9

Turkey

Islamic Republic of Iran

Afghanistan

Pakistan

Maldives

India

Sri Lanka

NepalBhutan National Centre for

Medium Range Weather

Forecasting (NCMRWF),

India - Nodal centre for

disaster early warning

framework

SAARC Disaster

Management Centre

New Delhi 2007

Regional Integrated Multi-

hazard Early Warning System

covering South Asia –

secretariat in Maldives.

Asian and Pacific centre for the

development of disaster

information management (APIDM)

in the Islamic Republic of Iran

Annual Conferences

on Disaster Risk

Management

Page 10: 6th SAES - Presentation by Nagesh Kumar (UNESCAP SRO-SSWA) - 'A Closer South Asia'

Global partnership for LDCs and LLDCs• Istanbul & Almaty programmes of action

• Major handicap for LDCs is poor productive

capacity – ESCAP Index of productive capacity the relative position of SSWA

LDCs is very low and has gone down

– Small base of investible resources

– LLDCs have additional handicap of access to seaProductive capacity in SSWA LDCs

Standard deviations from global average– LLDCs have additional handicap of access to sea

• National measures to address their constraints

– Stable macroeconomic framework

– Industrial policy and infrastructure development

– Domestic resource mobilization

• International support measures

– FDI, more effective ODA, innovative financing

– Market access, aid for trade

– Connectivity and transit facilitation

– Rise of South-South cooperation (e.g. China, India and Turkey now spend around US$ 1 billion per

year each in S-S cooperation)

– Also voluntary duty-free-quota-free market access Source: ESCAP productive capacity index

Standard deviations from global average

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Page 11: 6th SAES - Presentation by Nagesh Kumar (UNESCAP SRO-SSWA) - 'A Closer South Asia'

Concluding remarks

• Regionalism assumes a new criticality in the changed external context

• Time to move towards the vision of integrated South Asian economic space, connected with itself and rest of the region

• Need to expedite the implementation of RTAs and further • Need to expedite the implementation of RTAs and further deepen them

• Importance of services liberalization and investment promotion

• Recognize the criticality and potential of regional transport and energy connectivity

• Closing the infrastructure gaps and upgradation of others

• Regional transit agreement to enable cross border movements

• Play due role in incipient broader regionalism in Asia and make the 21st Century the Asian Century

Page 12: 6th SAES - Presentation by Nagesh Kumar (UNESCAP SRO-SSWA) - 'A Closer South Asia'

Thank you

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www.sswa.unescap.org