Trade wars and
the Great China Wall: How India can get its act together for a China-smart
trade policy
“A trade war between China and
India seems to be looming as India moved last Wednesday (August 9) to impose
anti-dumping duties on 93 products from China. Now Chinese companies must
reconsider the risks of investing in India amid strained bilateral trade ties,
and India should also be prepared for the possible consequences for its
ill-considered action.” Thus spake Global Times, organ of Chinese state media,
on August 13. But what is the reality of India-China trade?
India exported goods worth $10
billion to China in 2005. India had a trade surplus with China during 2003-5,
reveals trade data maintained by China. In 2016 Indian exports are still about
$10 billion, but its trade surplus has turned into a deficit of more than $50
billion. What happened in the intervening years? The trade deficit was largely
the result of China’s technical advancement. But China’s strategy to stifle
Indian imports also played an important part.
During 2005-16 India emerged as a
competent global supplier of polished diamonds, small cars, generic medicines,
buffalo meat, etc. China imports these products in large quantities for
domestic consumption, but not Indian products.
How does China reject Indian
products? Quality cannot be a problem as India exports these products to over a
100 countries, including the US and EU. So China uses a complex set of
inspection, product testing and quality certification requirements to stifle
imports from India. Such restrictions are called non-tariff barriers (NTBs). WTO
rules regulate import tariffs but are weak on regulating NTBs.
Chinese experts inspect Indian
factories. Cost is borne by the Indian side and clearance seldom comes. Only
Chinese labs do the product testing, and no appeal is allowed on their
decisions. Punitive product testing requirements ensure that India cannot
export buffalo meat to China. China will not accept Indian basmati rice, while
Pakistan’s rice is welcome. Again, no appeal allowed on the decisions. Issuance
of quarantine certificates for fruits or vegetables may take 3 years. Indian IT
firms cannot take part if the tender size is more than $100 million. The list
of restrictions is long.
Such measures ensured that
India’s exports to China in 2016 stayed at the 2005 level, even as India allowed
almost unrestricted access to Chinese goods during 2005-17. Of Indian imports
of mobile phones, telecom equipment, and bulk drugs, 70% come from China. If
China stops supplying bulk drugs India’s pharma exports will have a tough time,
but China is already working to move up the value chain.
More than 95% of Indian imports
of everyday use items also come from China. It is time to reduce this critical
dependence on China. A time bound action plan to manage imports and increase
exports can incorporate the following steps.
Push for large scale
manufacturing in 30 product groups from electronics, engineering and chemical
sectors. Accounting for 92% of imports from China, these should form the core
of Make in India programme. Provide 20 years direct tax holiday for investments
in these sectors.
Create a hundred design studios
for new product development. Put in place the German Mittelstand model of
industry-research-academia collaboration. This will help innovation-driven
small firms and reduce dependence on import of daily use goods.
Create an institution responsible
for developing standards and setting guidelines for inspection, testing and
quality certification of critical products. China’s NTB regime was aided by a
lack of Indian preparedness on these issues. Thereafter, use NTBs to manage
harmful imports as everyone else does. China used NTBs to maim India’s exports
without anyone realising what is happening. Anti-dumping duties can be used as
short term measures but create too much noise.
Be more diligent in trade
negotiations. For example India’s signing the Information Technology Agreement
(ITA) in 1997, which was voluntary, blocked development of India’s IT hardware
industry.
Finally, the truth about the
Global Times story. Anti-dumping duties on 93 Chinese products were already in
force for a long time. It was not a new development, although given the usual
Chinese spin
http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/toi-edit-page/trade-wars-and-the-great-china-wall-how-india-can-get-its-act-together-for-a-china-smart-trade-policy/
Rice export target set at 5.2 million tonnes in 2017
HCM City (VNA) – The Vietnam Food Association (VFA) aims to ship 2 million tonnes of rice to foreign countries in the last five months of the year, increasing total rice export for the whole year to 5.2 million tonnes, up 6 percent year-on-year.
Vietnam exported an estimated 3.24 million tonnes of rice at FOB value of 1.4 billion USD in the past seven months, representing an increase of 11 percent in volume and 11.4 percent in value over the same period last year.
July alone saw 584,000 tonnes of rice sold abroad for more than 240 million USD, which was the highest monthly volume so far this year, with most of the rice shipped to China, Bangladesh and Africa.
China remains Vietnam’s top rice importer, accounting for 40.65 percent of the total rice export, followed by the Philippines, Malaysia and Singapore. Shipments to Africa experienced a slight rise, making up 15.3 percent of the market share.
The VFA forecast that the global rice market will be led by high demand from Malaysia, Bangladesh, the Philippines and Sri Lanka. However, large rice exporters like Thailand, India and Pakistan are entering their main crop harvest, which will affect the rice market in the coming time.-VNA
Revenue scam: Senate recovers
N120billion, gives BUA, Dana, Huawei, Kereksuk
rice farms ultimatum Author: Jerrywright Ukwu UPDATED: 17 HOURS AGO VIEWS:
25966 Category: Local news, Business and Economy SHARE ON FACEBOOK SEND VIA
EMAIL SHARE ON FACEBOOK SEND VIA EMAIL - The Nigerian Senate joint committee on
Customs excise, tariff and marine transport are distinguishing themselves as a
relevant committee
- The
committee is probing the revenue scam that involves many popular companies -
Some of the companies were reportedly involved in round tripping and money
laundering The Senate joint committee on Customs excise, tariff and marine
Transport, said it has recovered N120 billion from companies involved in a
N30trillion revenue scam. The committee on Friday, August 18 directed 13 more
companies to appear before it on Monday, August 21 to explain their involvement
in the probe. Chairman of the committee, Senator Hope Uzodinma, in a statement
seen by NAIJ.com said the committee was giving the companies the last opportunity
to appear before it.
Chairman of the committee, Senator Hope
Uzodinma has given the companies till Monday, August 21 to appear before the
committee. Photo credit: Nigerian Senate PAY ATTENTION: Read the best news on
Nigeria’s #1 news app The companies are Dana Group, A-kehnal Integrated &
Logistics Limited, Don Climax/Skyaim, Gagsel International, Africa Tiles &
Ceramics and Network Oil & Gas. Others are IBG Investment Limited, BUA
International limited, Huawei Technologies, Indorama Petrochemicals, StarComms
Plc, African Industries and African Wire and Allied. Uzodinma disclosed that
the committee had resolved to direct the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) to start
issuing Demand Notice (DM) to companies found culpable in the on-going
investigation.
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in 2014
disclosed that Nigeria spent an average of N800billion annually on the
importation of rice. Unofficial import receipts through the Cotonou corridor
was not captured in the CBN figure. But the business of importing rice is so
huge and attractive that four neighboring countries of Benin, Togo, Cameroon
and even landlocked Niger Republic have technically factored transshipment or
smuggling of rice and allied commodities into Nigeria in their national
economic plan.
The 8th Senate continues to distinguish itself
as a responsible parliament. Photo credit: Nigerian Senate NAIJ.com checks
revealed that one of the farms, Keresuk Farm is owned by Rotimi Williams, an
in-law to former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo. Sources in the Senate say the
committee's findings prompted the recent verbal tirades against the National
Assembly by the former president. Other sources told NAIJ.com that the farm is
a front and not up to 50 acres of land, adding that they do not qualify for the
billions of waiver they have been getting.
In a related development, Acting President Yemi
Osinbajo on Tuesday, August 1, commissioned the 120,000 metric tones per year
WACOT rice mill. The rice mill is a wholly private venture by WACOT limited,
developed with policy support from the Kebbi state government and the federal
government. The mill, a N10 billion investment, is supported by an Outgrower
Scheme comprising 6,000 rice farmers. READ ALSO: Nigerian
man
grows cucumber in the south-east (photos) Watch a recent market survey by
NAIJ.com TV below Read more:
https://www.naij.com/1121196-revenue-scam-senate-recovers-n120billion-bua-dana-huawei-kereksuk-rice-farms.html
Bt13 billion seized in rice pledge case, says AMLO
national August 19, 2017 01:00
By THE NATION
3,941 Viewed
Days
before Yingluck verdict, anti-money laundering office boasts of assets frozen
in relation to high-profile scandal.
LESS
THAN a week before the Supreme Court delivers its verdict in the negligence
case against ex-prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra, the Anti-Money Laundering
Office (AMLO) yesterday boasted about its success in seizing or freezing almost
Bt13 billion in assets from offenders in a case stemming from the rice-pledging
scandal.
AMLO
secretary-general Chaiya Siriampankul said the case was among the 19
high-profile cases in which the agency followed a money trail and provided
public prosecutors with information to seek court orders for confiscation of
assets from offenders.
Over the past year, AMLO’s work has led to the
seizure or freezing of more than Bt40 billion from offenders in those criminal
and corruption cases, less than 10 per cent of the total estimated damages of
Bt469 billion, according to the agency’s chief. Chaiya told a press conference that one of the
high-profile cases stemmed from the previous government’s rice-pledging scheme.
The scandal led to more than 100 related cases involving estimated damages of
Bt405 billion.
AMLO so
far has managed to seize assets from people involved in only one of those
sub-cases – Bt12.91 billion from wealthy businessman Apichart Chansakulporn,
who is better known as “Sia Piang”, and three others, who were accused of
involvement in “fake” government-to-government rice-sale deals. Judgement day
The
highest court’s Criminal Division for Political Office Holders is scheduled to
deliver its verdict in Yingluck’s case on Friday.
The government-to-government rice-sale scandal case saw the highest
value of seized assets. It was followed by the zero-dollar Chinese tour case,
in which the operators of Fuan Travel and OA Transport had a combined Bt9.5
billion of assets seized.
Another high-profile graft case involving the Klong Dan wastewater
treatment plant, saw Bt6.35 billion in assets belonging to the offenders
seized. It was followed by the Wat Dhammakaya embezzlement case, in which
Bt2.34 billion was seized from certain businesspeople involved with the
controversial temple.
Another Bt724 million was seized from those involved in the Nataree
massage parlour human-smuggling case, where many young migrant women were found
to have worked illegally in entertainment venues.
AMLO was also instrumental in seizing about Bt500 million from
people involved in a narcotics smuggling network led by Laotian drug lord
Xaysana Keopimpha, who was arrested at the Suvarnabhumi Airport in January,
said Chaiya.
The agency also played an important role in confiscation of assets
from violators suspected of laundering money – including drug smugglers, embezzlers,
online gambling operators, and corrupt foreign officials hiding here, said the
secretary-general.
Chaiya said that Thailand has improved its performance in enforcing
the anti-money laundering law and combating the financing of terrorism. At the
latest general assembly of the Asia-Pacific Group on Money Laundering (APG)
held in Colombo, Sri Lanka, a review of Thailand showed that the Kingdom
achieved a score of 56 per cent, much better than the previous review in 2007,
when it got 31 per cent.
Thailand was rated “high” and “highest” in 26 out of the 40 items
in the review, according to the AMLO chief.
He said that in four out of the 11 areas reviewed, the country was
in a “substantial level”, comparable to leading performers such as Singapore
and Belgium. But Thailand still needed to improve in halting bribe taking, tax
evasion, stock manipulation and contraband smuggling
http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/politics/30324252
Norte officials, residents back golden rice dev’t
by: | 7
LAOAG CITY — Some local officials and
residents here expressed support for the development of a genetically-modified
rice to help solve Vitamin A and mineral deficiency among children.Spearheaded
by the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) and Philippine Rice
Research Institute (PRRI), researchers have been pushing for the development
and commercialization of the “golden rice” to complement solutions to the
Vitamin A and mineral deficiency among children.
To produce golden rice, the genes
of a corn and a bacterium are combined and inserted in ordinary rice. Study
shows that eating a cup of golden rice would cover about half of the
recommended daily intake of Vitamin A for adults.
To date, the golden rice project
has completed a single confine field trial and is already applying for field
trial approval.
To solicit support, a team from
IRRI is briefing various stakeholders in different parts of the country about
golden rice.
In Batac City, a multi-sectoral
group composed of representatives of state universities and colleges, farmers,
housewives, researchers, educators, legislators and policy makers, among
others, attended a public forum on Friday to familiarize themselves with this
genetically modified crop.
Here in Laoag, former Department
of Education superintendent Cecilia Aribuabo said she fully supports the
cultivation of golden rice, which she noted contains beta-carotene that is
converted into Vitamin A as needed by the body.
Golden rice project field test supervisor
Ronalyn Miranda meanwhile clarified that golden rice is not a “silver bullet”
that would solve Vitamin A deficiency but it offers an alternative to improve
the people’s health.
Dr. Reynaldo Castro of the PRRI
said a field test has been conducted in Batac since 2011 and it has been proven
safe to eat.
Different stakeholders here have
signed a manifesto supporting the development of golden rice
http://northboundasia.com/2017/08/20/ilocos-norte-officials-residents-back-golden-rice-devt/
National Scientist Gelia T. Castillo: The scientist with a big
heart
By Dr. Emil Q. Javier
‘There are those who look at things the way they are, and ask
why… I dream of things that never were, and ask why not?’ – Robert Kennedy
The country lost a truly outstanding Filipino with the demise of
National Scientist Gelia Tagumpay Castillo two weeks ago.
The best among our scientists are elected by their peers through
a rigorous screening process into the National Academy of Science and Technology
(NAST) which of late has 67 members. And among themselves, the members of the
Academy vote by secret ballot the most eminent for conferment by the President
of the Republic the prestigious rank and title of National Scientist (NS).NS
Gelia T. Castillo was one of the magnificent 13 with that illustrious rank and
title.
A rural sociologist of international renown, she served our
people well and did our country proud. In her 64 years of service to our
country starting with her graduation in 1953 with a bachelor’s degree in
psychology in UP Diliman (with magna cum laude honors) her guiding philosophy
always had been: Science Must Serve a Human Purpose. As she put it “I have
always believed that when the best of science and scientists are devoted to the
problems of those who have less in life, that is equity and ethics at its
best”.
After UP Diliman, she earned advanced degrees from Pennsylvania
State University and Cornell University. She spent her entire career as
professor of rural sociology at UP Los Banos. In 1994, shortly after
retirement, the Philippine Institute for Development Studies (PIDS) of which
Dr. Castillo was a most valued trustee, held a symposium in her honor.
In my capacity then as President of the University of the
Philippines and trustee of PIDS, I was assigned the privilege of delivering a
testimonial message. The proceedings of that event together with 17 scientific
papers contributed by our country’s leading economists, demographers and social
scientists were published in Volume 21 of the Philippine Journal of
Development.
Following was my message with a few additions:
In honor of Dr. Gelia T. Castillo
It is my distinct honor and privilege to deliver this
testimonial speech in recognition of the achievements and contributions of Gelia
Castillo: academician, university professor, national social scientist, eminent
sociologist, dedicated teacher, outstanding woman and person.
What sets Gelia apart from the rest? A many-splendored
individual, Gelia stands out for her ability to synthesize. She has creatively
woven disparate pieces of information into major scholarly works like All in a
Grain of Rice, Beyond Manila, and How Participatory is Participatory
Development? She has a keen eye for detail and the patience to wade through
volumes of materials, drawing insights and kernels of wisdom even from lousily
written reports or poor scholarly works. More importantly, she is able to weave
these details together with her own research contribution into a wonderful
tapestry of broad social concepts and universal themes. Gelia also has that
ability to simultaneously see the trees and the forest in full detail and vivid
color, so to speak.
Gelia’s aptitude for integrating and sifting through information
has made her an invaluable chair or member of advisory councils, development
missions, evaluation teams, steering committees, and executive boards of
Philippine institutions such as the National Economic and Development Authority
(NEDA), Population Commission, Central Bank, Department of Agriculture (DA),
Department of Health (DOH), Development Academy of the Philippines (DAP),
National Commission on Women, Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice),
Philippine Institute for Development Studies (PIDS), Policy and Development
Foundation, and Philippine Business for Social Progress (PBSP).
The list of foreign professional and development organizations
she has been asked to advise or review is equally long — the
International Development Research Centre (IDRC) of Canada, World Health
Organization (WHO), International Labour Organization (ILO), East-West Center
Communication Institute in Hawaii, International Rural Sociological Association
(IRSA), The World Bank (WB), International Fund for Agricultural Development
(IFAD) with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO),
International Center for Living Aquatic Resources Management (ICLARM), United
Nations University (UNU), International Potato Center (CIP) in Peru, and the
International Rice Research Institute (IRRI). They are so numerous I am sure I
missed many other institutions. Several foreign universities have invited her
to serve as an External Reviewer for graduate student examinations.
Closer to home, Gelia has served various committees and task
forces at the University of the Philippines. She was very much sought after for
crucial sensitive committee work. While I was Chancellor of UP in Los Baños, I
knew that Gelia’s membership in a committee was a guarantee that there will be
no snowjob or whitewash. Gelia always calls a spade a spade. However her skills
as a social scientist and humanist made whatever medicine she prescribed go
down easily.
I had first-hand experience as the target of Gelia’s critical,
analytical and rigorous assessment. The study group which I commissioned and
which she headed decried that social scientists were being treated as
second-class citizens in the UPLB campus. If her comments came from another
person I might have taken it as an offense. However, she delivered her message
with sincerity, goodwill, deep conviction and a touch of humor. She was
supportive rather than combative. As a consequence of her disarming style,
unassailed logic and coherent thinking, I listened attentively and took the
appropriate remedial measures.
What is likewise noteworthy about Gelia as a person is that her
integrative mind and breadth of intellectual vision were nurtured by a lifetime
involvement in development concerns, a commitment which has brought her to
various provinces in the Philippines and to 40 countries. Gelia’s development
concerns spanned a wide range of interests (agriculture, farmers credit, women
empowerment, poverty, health, rural governance etc.). She pioneered and blazed
the trail for Filipino social scientists in these areas. The continuing thread
throughout her professional life has been the tireless commitment to
development efforts which benefit the poor. Gelia’s name in development and
academic circles has been associated with that rare combination of intellect,
style and above all, commitment to the poor.
Gelia’s unceasing efforts to orient scientists toward
alleviating the plight of the downtrodden is matched by her many attempts to
initiate and nurture exchanges among social scientists and with biological and
physical scientists. She has been a champion of multidisciplinary and
interdisciplinary work, although being the realist that she is, she is also
quick to caution against some of its pitfalls.
Honoring Gelia, I feel we are honoring ourselves in her
reflected glory. We are honoring her roots to the historic town of Pagsanjan
Laguna; to the Pedro Guevarra Memorial High School (then Laguna High School)
where she graduated valedictorian in 1948 (which is also my Alma Mater), and
the University of the Philippines both in Diliman and Los Baños with which she
has been most closely associated. She does honor to Filipino institutions to
Filipino scientists and to her country.
Although long retired, NS Castillo continued to be active in the
affairs of NAST and her two favorite rural institutions — the Center for
Agricultural and Rural Development (CARD) and the PhilRice.
CARD is the country’s pioneer and leading micro-finance and
micro-insurance institution with close to five million members. PhilRice on the
other hand is one of our more productive and regionally, highly regarded
agricultural science research institutes. In both institutions NS Castillo was
present at their births until her demise, providing inspiration, steady
direction, critical thinking and innovation. Dr. Jaime Aristotle Alip and Dr.
Santiago Obien, founding directors of CARD and PhilRice, respectively, have
nothing but high praise and admiration for her incisive intellect, nurturing
spirit but most importantly for her selflessness — her big heart.
*****
Dr. Emil Q. Javier is a Member of the National Academy of
Science and Technology (NAST) and also Chair of the Coalition for Agriculture
Modernization in the Philippines (CAMP). For any feedback, email
eqjavier@yahoo.com
http://business.mb.com.ph/2017/08/19/national-scientist-gelia-t-castillo-the-scientist-with-a-big-heart/
Maximum retail
price of rice dropped, no change in Sugar prices - Minister Bathiudeen
http://www.colombopage.com/archive_17B/Aug19_1503156320CH.php
COLOMBO
DESPATCH | INTERNATIONAL
Coping with the worst drought in 40 years
Leading News from Sri
Lanka::
Sat, Aug 19, 2017, 08:55 pm
SL Time, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.
Participating in a ceremony
in Vavuniya Minister Bathiudeen said the eight-member Committee on Cost of
Living at its last meeting held under the leadership of Minister Malik
Samarawickrema took measures to remove the maximum retail price set on imported
rice imports. The Minister added that now anyone can import rice.
"We expect that we will
be able to provide rice to consumers at a price that is lower than the previous
maximum retail price now," the Minister said.
The Cost of Living Committee
has also decided to raise the import tax on sugar by eight rupees in accordance
with the prices in the world market, the Minister said.
However, the eight rupee
increase in the tax should not affect the consumers, he said expressing hope
that wholesale and retails traders will provide the sugar at the same price as
before
Sri Lankan rice and curry is a thing
of legend. With steamed rice, often of the red variety, served at the centre of
their plate, locals serve yellow dal and curries made of vegetables, greens,
fish and meat around it, virtually covering the entire colour palette within
that small radius. Rice is cultivated locally, mostly from the island’s North
Western, North Central and Northern Provinces. This year, though, Sri Lanka is
in a spot. From meeting the domestic requirement for rice almost entirely, Sri
Lanka is now considering a substantial import of rice to ensure food security,
following a drought, the worst the island has seen in 40 years. Clear warning
signs emerged in 2016, after monsoons failed. Farmers’ worst fears came true
when the drought extended well into 2017, affecting their two main harvest
seasons, Maha and Yala. Speaking on what he called a “really bad situation”,
Sri Lanka’s Agriculture Minister Duminda Dissanayake told The Hindu: “We hoped
to cultivate 8,00,000 hectares of paddy this year, but about 50% of that has
been damaged due to the drought.”
To cope with this, Sri Lanka is
importing over 3,00,000 tonnes of rice, mostly from India. However, given the
country’s monthly requirement of 2,00,000 tonnes of rice, imports are only set
to increase. The Central Bank has said that if the drought persists through the
year, Sri Lanka may have to import food and fuel worth an additional $800
million.
According to Sri Lanka’s Disaster
Management Centre, almost 1.3 million people have been hit by the drought.
Several thousand farmers in 20 of the country’s 25 districts are suffering,
their land and soil parched for over a year now. Data point to a severe impact in
Kurunegala district, less than three hours’ drive from Colombo, and Puttalam —
both in the North Western Province. While Anuradhapura in the North Central
Province has also been badly hit, the Tamil-majority Northern Province is the
most-affected region, where farmers in all its five districts of Jaffna,
Mullaitivu, Kilinochchi, Vavuniya and Mannar are in a crisis. People here are
also facing a serious drinking water problem.
Broader patterns
Speaking of possible underlying
causes, experts point to some broader patterns in climate in the island. Buddhi
Marambe, professor of Crop Science at the Agriculture Faculty in University of
Peradeniya, said over the last 50 years, Sri Lanka’s average temperature had
risen by 0.01-0.03 degree Celsius annually. “The impact of such climate change
has been that the wet seasons have got wetter, and dry seasons have become
drier over the years,” he told The Hindu.
The last time the island faced such
a severe drought was in 1973-74, and preparing for such a disaster in 2016 was
simply off the cards at the policy level. “When two inter-monsoons and two
monsoons [southwest and northeast] fail, that severely affects the yield. The
government is in a precarious situation, with no other option but to import,”
said Prof. Marambe, who chairs the country’s National Experts’ Committee on
Climate Change Adaptation. Following the drought, many younger farmers are
switching to other jobs, Reuters reported. An estimated 1.8 million farm
families are engaged in paddy cultivation in Sri Lanka, where agriculture
remains a key driver of the rural economy.
There is more to the drought story
than climate change, argued Chinthaka Rajapakse, moderator of the Movement for
Land and Agricultural Reform. “To start with, the government lacks a long-term
strategy to tackle climate change. Moreover, its policies systematically
exclude the poor. Where do ordinary people like farmers figure in its grand
development agenda?” he asked.
http://www.thehindu.com/news/international/coping-with-the-worst-drought-in-40-years/article19525043.ece
Customs seize
used tyres worth N66m, other commodities worth N141m
August 19, 2017
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