‘Sri Lanka could help Chinese manufacturers offset trade war impact’ | Page 2 | Sunday Observer

‘Sri Lanka could help Chinese manufacturers offset trade war impact’

7 July, 2019
Malik Samarawickrama
Malik Samarawickrama

Sri Lanka is wooing Chinese manufacturers, urging them to make use of its preferential duty-free treatment by the US and Europe as a way to offset the growing tariff pressure of the trade war.

Minister of Development Strategies and International Trade, Malik Samarawickrama was in Beijing last week as a member of a delegation at an investment forum at the Sri Lankan Embassy attended by dozens of Chinese businesspeople.

“China has invested heavily in infrastructure in Sri Lanka and they are assisting us to build ports, roads, railways and water supply schemes. We would like China to get involved in setting up their manufacturing plants in Sri Lanka, primarily for export,” he said.

“They can make use of the preferential market access we have. We have duty-free access to European Union countries and have free-trade agreements with Pakistan, Singapore and India,” the Minister said.

Along with trade officials and diplomats, Samarawickrama was also keen to boost investor confidence following the Easter Sunday bombings in Colombo.

“Let me assure you, absolutely, Sri Lanka is safe for investment,” he told the dozens of representatives from Chinese state-owned and private companies who attended the forum.

“None of the industries have been affected as a result of the bombings and none of the export orders were cancelled or delayed. This is a testament to the resilience of the economy,” he said.

China is one of Sri Lanka’s largest trading partners and – sometimes controversially – the largest financier of Sri Lanka’s new infrastructure facilities. Other big lenders to the island nation are the Asian Development Bank and Japan. Earlier this year, the government signed a US$989.5 million loan agreement with China’s Export-Import Bank for a major new motorway project. And last month Sri Lanka’s finance ministry confirmed it was in talks with the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank for a loan of nearly US$1 billion for energy and motorways.

The surge of Chinese investment has raised concerns that Sri Lanka could become caught up in the rivalry between China and India as Beijing seeks to expand its influence in South Asia and the Indian Ocean.

Last month, Sri Lanka signed an agreement with India and Japan to jointly develop the East Container Terminal at the Port of Colombo, which some observers said could become a competitor to the China-funded Hambantota Port, and was perhaps a sign that the island nation was seeking to neutralise the growing influence of China.

Samarawickrama denied claims the involvement of Japan and India in Sri Lanka’s biggest port project was to counter China’s influence.

Under the agreement, he said, the terminal was owned by the Sri Lanka Port Authority, with a 51 per cent stake, while Japan and India would hold the balance 49 per cent.

“We need the expertise from Japan,” Samarawickrama said. “We need the Indians to get involved in the operation because 75 per cent of the transshipment cargoes in the Colombo port come from India and India is extremely important to us. They are the operators of the terminal and they are not building any ports, the Minister said. - South China Morning Post

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