China, Pakistan to begin second phase of trade talks next week

ANI  |  Lahore [Pakistan] 

Commerce Minister Pervaiz Malik has asked to revise the existing agreement (FTA) on the less-than-equal reciprocity principle ahead of the eighth round of negotiations on the second phase of the FTA to be held in on September 14 and 15.

"We will demand an early-harvest programme in the existing FTA that will cover 100 items of Pakistan's export interest," the Dawn quoted Malik, as saying.

The negotiations were held to overcome the trade imbalance that exists between the two countries.

Commerce Secretary Younus Dagha will lead a technical team to represent in the secretary-level talks.

Malik said signed several bilateral and regional FTAs, which limited the benefit of preferences to China's FTA with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations countries has also made the preferential treaty for mostly irrelevant.

The minister said will urge to enter into the early-harvest programme. "We also raised this issue with Pakistan's foreign minister before his visit to China," he said, adding that the ministry also sought help from the Foreign Office to make the treaty beneficial.

may not sign the second phase of the FTA as it fears that the move will further increase imports from Authorities in are unwilling to accept Islamabad's demand for the revival of the preferential treatment for exportable products under the FTA, the Dawn reports.

As per the original plan, the second phase was supposed to be implemented from Jan 1, 2014. Both countries started negotiations for the second phase in 2011. The FTA covers more than 7,000 tariff lines at eight-digit tariff code under the Harmonised System (HS). Both sides have held seven rounds of negotiation on the second phase to break the deadlock.

A commerce ministry report revealed that could not utilise the concessions granted by under the first phase. Pakistan's key exports to were raw material and intermediate products, such as cotton yarn, woven fabric, grey fabric etc. Value-added products were missing despite the fact that some of these products, like garments, were included in the concessionary regime.

It only exported in 253 tariff lines, where the average export value was $500 or more, which was around 3.3pc of the total tariff lines (7,550) on which granted concessions to

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First Published: Sat, September 09 2017. 16:13 IST