How Can South Asia Turn Its Proximity from a Burden to an Advantage?
Around the world, trade has played a critical role in reducing poverty. Some of the most successful countries in East Asia, Europe, and North America owe much of their success to strong trade relations with their neighbors. However, South Asian cou...
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okr-10986-314402021-05-25T10:54:37Z How Can South Asia Turn Its Proximity from a Burden to an Advantage? Kathuria, Sanjay Mathur, Priya REGIONAL INTEGRATION INTRAREGIONAL TRADE REGIONAL TRADE TRADE LIBERALIZATION SOUTH ASIA FREE TRADE AREA TARIFFS NON-TARIFF BARRIERS CONNECTIVITY AIR TRANSPORT INTERDEPENDENCE Around the world, trade has played a critical role in reducing poverty. Some of the most successful countries in East Asia, Europe, and North America owe much of their success to strong trade relations with their neighbors. However, South Asian countries have yet to reap the benefits of proximity. Intraregional trade accounts for a little more than 5 percent of South Asia’s total trade, compared with 50 percent in East Asia and the Pacific and 22 percent in Sub-Saharan Africa.The World Bank’s recent report, A Glass Half Full: The Promise of Regional Trade in South Asia, clearly illustrates the gaps between current and potential trade in South Asia.The force of gravity—the degree of trade attraction between countries—is also manifest in high levels of informal trade. Informal trade has been estimated at 50 percent of formal trade in South Asia, aggregating assessments of various studies covering the 1993 to 2005 period.The large gaps between actual and potential trade arise because South Asian trade regimes discriminate against each other. This can be shown through an index of trade restrictiveness. Based on global trade data, such an index generates an implicit tariff that measures a country’s tariff and non-tariff barriers on imports. In India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka, the index is two to nine times higher for imports from South Asia than from the rest of the world.Moreover, although the average burden of non-tariff measures may not appear high, it is high for specific product and market combinations in South Asia. It varies from over 75 percent to over 2,000 percent. Sri Lanka consistently appears on the list of product-market combinations with the highest trade restrictiveness index in the region. Barriers that have held back trade and investment within South Asia include tariffs and para tariffs, real and perceived non-tariff barriers, connectivity costs as manifested in the cost of air travel, and the broader trust deficit. 2019-03-26T19:02:34Z 2019-03-26T19:02:34Z 2019-03 Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/889941553259868763/How-Can-South-Asia-Turn-Its-Proximity-from-a-Burden-to-anAdvantage http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31440 English SARConnect;No. 5 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Brief South Asia South Asia |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English |
topic |
REGIONAL INTEGRATION INTRAREGIONAL TRADE REGIONAL TRADE TRADE LIBERALIZATION SOUTH ASIA FREE TRADE AREA TARIFFS NON-TARIFF BARRIERS CONNECTIVITY AIR TRANSPORT INTERDEPENDENCE |
spellingShingle |
REGIONAL INTEGRATION INTRAREGIONAL TRADE REGIONAL TRADE TRADE LIBERALIZATION SOUTH ASIA FREE TRADE AREA TARIFFS NON-TARIFF BARRIERS CONNECTIVITY AIR TRANSPORT INTERDEPENDENCE Kathuria, Sanjay Mathur, Priya How Can South Asia Turn Its Proximity from a Burden to an Advantage? |
geographic_facet |
South Asia South Asia |
relation |
SARConnect;No. 5 |
description |
Around the world, trade has played a
critical role in reducing poverty. Some of the most
successful countries in East Asia, Europe, and North America
owe much of their success to strong trade relations with
their neighbors. However, South Asian countries have yet to
reap the benefits of proximity. Intraregional trade accounts
for a little more than 5 percent of South Asia’s total
trade, compared with 50 percent in East Asia and the Pacific
and 22 percent in Sub-Saharan Africa.The World Bank’s recent
report, A Glass Half Full: The Promise of Regional Trade in
South Asia, clearly illustrates the gaps between current and
potential trade in South Asia.The force of gravity—the
degree of trade attraction between countries—is also
manifest in high levels of informal trade. Informal trade
has been estimated at 50 percent of formal trade in South
Asia, aggregating assessments of various studies covering
the 1993 to 2005 period.The large gaps between actual and
potential trade arise because South Asian trade regimes
discriminate against each other. This can be shown through
an index of trade restrictiveness. Based on global trade
data, such an index generates an implicit tariff that
measures a country’s tariff and non-tariff barriers on
imports. In India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka, the index is two
to nine times higher for imports from South Asia than from
the rest of the world.Moreover, although the average burden
of non-tariff measures may not appear high, it is high for
specific product and market combinations in South Asia. It
varies from over 75 percent to over 2,000 percent. Sri Lanka
consistently appears on the list of product-market
combinations with the highest trade restrictiveness index in
the region. Barriers that have held back trade and
investment within South Asia include tariffs and para
tariffs, real and perceived non-tariff barriers,
connectivity costs as manifested in the cost of air travel,
and the broader trust deficit. |
format |
Brief |
author |
Kathuria, Sanjay Mathur, Priya |
author_facet |
Kathuria, Sanjay Mathur, Priya |
author_sort |
Kathuria, Sanjay |
title |
How Can South Asia Turn Its Proximity from a Burden to an Advantage? |
title_short |
How Can South Asia Turn Its Proximity from a Burden to an Advantage? |
title_full |
How Can South Asia Turn Its Proximity from a Burden to an Advantage? |
title_fullStr |
How Can South Asia Turn Its Proximity from a Burden to an Advantage? |
title_full_unstemmed |
How Can South Asia Turn Its Proximity from a Burden to an Advantage? |
title_sort |
how can south asia turn its proximity from a burden to an advantage? |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/889941553259868763/How-Can-South-Asia-Turn-Its-Proximity-from-a-Burden-to-anAdvantage http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31440 |
_version_ |
1764474333663592448 |