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Crunching the numbers: What is real export benefit of GSP Plus to Sri Lanka?

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28 June 2017 10:49 am - 0     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

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Sri Lanka’s overall exports to the European Union (EU) can increase by US $ 480 million – almost 15 percent on average – from the current earnings of US $ 3,275 million to US $ 3,756 million, as a result of regaining the Generalized Scheme of Preferences Plus (GSP Plus) benefit, according to the preliminary estimates using a partial equilibrium model.
The estimation is derived employing the SMART Simulations of the World Integrated Trade Solutions (WITS) and disaggregated trade data (at HS 6 digit level). This figure is slightly higher than the number quoted by the EU – a benefit of over 300 million euros (about US $ 335 million) – reported in the local media.

 


Reinstatement of GSP Plus
On May 19, 2017, the EU granted Sri Lanka better access to its market for exports under GSP Plus. While the scheme is conditional on Sri Lanka making progress on human and labour rights and sustainable development, it can boost exports to the EU, Sri Lanka’s largest export market. GSP Plus aims at furthering Sri Lanka’s development through more trade, as well as by diversifying exports and attracting investment with the removal of custom duties by the EU.
Sri Lanka is now among eight other GSP Plus beneficiaries, which include, Armenia, Bolivia, Cape Verde, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Pakistan, Paraguay, the Philippines. Aside from GSP Plus, the EU has two other trade arrangements– 1) a general arrangement (‘Standard GSP’), which is targeted at developing countries that are classified by the World Bank as lower or lower-middle-income countries and 2) Everything But Arms (‘EBA’) arrangement for 49 Least Developed Countries (LDCs).

 


Biggest beneficiaries of GSP Plus
What is the likely economic impact of GSP Plus on Sri Lanka’s exports? Previous studies show that the GSP benefit can lead to an increase in export but numbers vary significantly between the three different arrangements, product groups and beneficiary countries.
Table 1 contains results from simulating the removal of tariffs by the EU on Sri Lanka, with the exception of tariffs on some sensitive (agricultural) items. While Sri Lanka’s exports are likely to grow on average at 15 percent, the growth rates differ depending on the export category in question. 
For example, exports of animal and animal products are estimated to grow by as much as 32 percent (or US $ 30 million). Sri Lanka’s main exports to the EU, textiles and apparel, accounting for bulk (62 percent) of the total exports to the regional bloc, is likely to grow by more than 21 percent (or US $ 424.6 million) as a result of GSP Plus.
A breakdown of the above overall figures indicates that exports, which stand to benefit the most from the duty free access to the EU, include articles of textile and apparel, fish (fresh or chilled), bicycles and other cycles and coconut oil, to name a few (Table 2).
Currently, under the normal GSP scheme, the average duty levied by the EU on HS61 is 9.34 percent but the number varies between 6.76 to 9.6 percent, depending on the items in question. Similarly, the duties on other items of export interest are high and vary significantly at the disaggregated product level. Under the GSP Plus scheme, these would be brought down to zero, providing a substantial duty advantage to the Sri Lankan exporters, trading with 
the EU.
Due to tariff reductions by the EU, there will be ‘trade creation’ effects, as products from Sri Lanka become cheaper and there will be new buyers in the EU who would now want to buy from Sri Lanka. At the same time, there will be some ‘trade diversion’, that is, there will a shift of demand from other competing, supplying countries to Sri Lanka in the EU market. 
Countries which are likely to be most affected as a result of Sri Lanka regaining GSP Plus will include China, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Turkey and India. It appears from the numbers that trade diversion will be marginally higher than trade creation.

 


Caveat
According to available literature, the EU’s GSP scheme has had an overall positive impact on the beneficiary countries; it has increased the developing countries’ exports and welfare. In addition, the literature further suggests that the EU’s GSP has helped with export diversification and foreign direct investment (FDI). While the SMART model yields important (positive) quantitative results, the model captures direct effects of a trade policy change only in one sector of an economy, that is, the model assumes that changes in that sector have no or minimal impact on other sectors. Thus, the results may be sensitive to assumptions and parameters used. Despite its shortcomings, a partial equilibrium framework is useful as it allows the utilization of widely available trade data at the appropriate level of detail to capture variables of interest to policymakers and others. 
It is also important to bear in mind that the impact on exports occurs within two years after the preferences have been granted, according to economic assessment of the EU GSP arrangements in developing countries. Further, the utilization rates vary significantly from country to country and differ by arrangement types. 
Of the three schemes – Standard GSP, GSP Plus and EBA – the utilization rate was found to be the lowest for the GSP Plus arrangement, reportedly 66.1 percent in 2014. Nonetheless, GSP Plus can make an important contribution to increasing Sri Lanka’s exports to the EU market, especially at a time when Sri Lanka’s exports are performing poorly.
 (Dr. Janaka Wijayasiri is a Research Fellow at the Institute of Policy Studies of Sri Lanka (IPS). To view this article online and to share your comments, visit the IPS Blog ‘Talking Economics’ - http://www.ips.lk/talkingeconomics/) 


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