A framework trade agreement was signed
between India and the Mercosur trade block of Latin America on the 17th
of June in Asuncion, Paraguay. This sets in motion the process that will
ultimately establish a 'Free Trade Area' between the Indian market and
Mercosur - the Southern Core Common Market in Latin America. "The
signing of the framework agreement will pave the way to enter into Preferential
Trade Agreement as the first step and ultimately to negotiate a Free Trade
Agreement in long-term interest," the official spokesman for the
Indian Ministry of Commerce said in New Delhi, prior to the actual signing
of the agreement. The protocol calls for "clear-cut, reliable and
enduring ground rules to further the development of trade and investment".
"India is a significant point of reference for Mercosur, and not
solely on account of the extraordinary growth that we have witnessed in
some sectors, such as information technology and specialty chemicals,"
the Paraguayan foreign minister said.
The procedure for a Preferential Trade Agreement (PTA) and a subsequent
Free Trade Agreement (FTA) is likely to be concluded by August 2003. Tariff
concessions on a reciprocal basis and the mutual reduction of Customs
duties should follow soon after. For India, this offers major trading
possibilities since Mercosur is the third largest common market in the
world, after the US and the European Union. For Mercosur, which has been
keen to develop markets outside the US and the EU, its largest trading
associates outside of Latin America, this also poses exciting opportunities.
India, with its second highest growth rate among the developing nations
and a population of over one billion, can offer a market which is both
large and possesses considerable buying power.
In the post WTO world, where preferential trade agreements are flourishing,
this agreement has even more potential. It can help identify alternate
and sometimes cheaper sources of goods between the trading partners. It
can also therefore undermine the dominance of other trading partners.
So this agreement can also be used as a tool for strategic reasons. It
also helps to facilitate co-operation between the weaker developing countries
and help the South build a joint economic perspective.
Mercosur, an integration of the economies of the four countries of Argentina,
Brazil, Uruguay and Paraguay, was set up in 1991. It counts Bolivia and
Chile as associates. The four member countries hold a population of almost
200 million (Brazil 150; Argentina 33; Paraguay 4,5 and Uruguay 3,1);
a total area of 11863 square kilometres; a GNP of over 700 billion US
dollars and foreign trade adds up to 120 billion US dollars. Intra-regional
trade within Mercosur is being gradually liberalised. Tariff on 90% of
intra-regional trade has been removed, with Common External Tariff (CET)
ranging from 0-20%. Since the signing of the Asunción Treaty in
1991 inter regional trade has almost tripled from 5,1 billion US dollars
to 14,38 billion in 1995, while trade with the rest of the world increased
from 67 to 120 billion US dollars. Chile and Bolivia are associate members
of MERCOSUR.
Initiatives for greater interaction between the Latin American economies
and India had already begun. The Focus-LAC (Latin American Countries)
programme, the most important from the Indian side, which is an integrated
effort of Government of India, Indian Trade Promotion Organisation, Export
Promotion Councils, Chambers of Commerce and Industry, and Institutions
such as the Exim Bank and the Export Credit Guarantee Corporation of India
(ECGC), had been drawn up in 2000 to enquire into greater trading possibilities
in the Latin American region. Among the Mercosur countries, the programme
concentrated on the giants, Brazil and Argentina.
Trade between the two countries had also been increasing in the recent
past. Though at present, India accounts for only 0.83 per cent of total
Mercosur imports, it has seen a drastic rise over the last two years.
While in 1999-00, total exports from India to the four Mercosur countries
were 317.60 million US$, it almost doubled to 626.49 US$ (2001-02) within
the span of two years. Brazil and Argentina account for more than 95%
of India's exports to Mercosur. Uruguay and Paraguay have a negligible
presence at the moment. India's shares in Brazil and Argentina's imports
are also higher than the average, at 0.98 and 0.74 per cent (2001). Brazil
has been the most dominant trading partner of the four, and India's share
in Brazilian imports has steadily increased from 0.27 % in 1994 to the
present figure.
Exports from Mercosur, on the other hand, had started to increase a little
earlier, since 1998. It reached 664 million US$ in 2000, and went onto
to reach 765.74 million US$ in 2001-02. The share of Mercosur in India's
total imports is about 1.5 % in 2001-02 (excluding petroleum and products).
Brazil and Argentina again display their dominance as India's largest
suppliers among the Mercosur bloc. Argentina supplied 57% of the total
imports from Mercosur in 2001-02 while Brazil contributed 40.24 %. Argentina's
higher share is explained by the fact that it exported more than three
times the amount of vegetable oil exported by Brazil in 2001-02. Vegetable
Oil is India's single largest import from Mercosur.
Exports from India to Mercosur:
The problem of geographical proximity had always been a key issue for
trade between India and South America. Transport has turned out to be
expensive and time-consuming. This was a major determinant of trade in
this case, since many studies have shown that geographical proximity remained
an important reason behind the high intra-regional trade that Mercosur
pursued with vigour (Bhattacharya and Pal, 2000). This obviously conferred
significant advantage on member and neighbouring countries and imposed
certain disadvantages for far away countries like India. The fact that
very few direct shipping lines existed between India and the Mercosur
countries compounded the problem.
Another major factor that encouraged intra-regional trade in Mercosur
and discouraged trading possibilities outside was the regime of preferential
tariffs within Mercosur and within the close geographical region around
Mercosur. The differences between Mercosur's common external tariff regime
applicable to India and its intra-tariff regime in conjunction with the
preferential tariffs for Andean Countries and Mercosur plus (including
Chile and Bolivia) created major disincentives for Indian exporters since
it gave competing South American countries substantial comparative advantages.
Thiss compounded by the fact that many commodities in which India had
export potential showed a strong interdependence between the Mercosur
countries. So given the geographical proximity and tariff advantages,
it was very difficult for India to gain sufficient market access for those
commodities where the intra-regional dependence is more than 80 percent.
Now, with the signing of the Free Trade Agreement becoming a possible
reality, this disadvantage should get greatly reduced.
Another tariff related problem that imposed a major restriction on trade
was the rate of Common External Tariffs (CET) imposed on other countries
including India. These were marked by an escalation over time. Non-primary
products, which are a major importable for the Mercosur countries, showed
very high levels as well as a tendency to grow at a steep rate. A forecast
by Laird (1996), which in reality has borne out, showed average rates
of escalations in CET between 1995 and 2001-06 to be 6.3 % for goods in
the first stage of processing, 9.1% for semi processed goods and a massive
12.5 % for fully processed products. Both machinery and transport equipment
(Mercosur's biggest importable) and chemicals including pharmaceuticals
(only the second/third highest demand in all 4 countries), for which there
is a big demand in the Mercosur countries, fall in these categories. Since
these happen to be the biggest exports from India to Mercosur, the escalation
in tariffs affected India significantly. A Free trade Agreement would
also eliminate the significance of this escalation for India.
In addition to tariff barriers, India had also faced non-tariff measures
(NTM) on its major exports to Mercosur. This effect was stronger in Brazil
and Argentina, India's major markets within Mercosur, which had a regime
of higher NTMs in manufactured goods compared to Uruguay and Brazil. It
is interesting to note that chemicals and industrial inputs, which form
bulk of India's exports to Brazil and Argentina, are the sectors that
faced more than 80 percent incidence of NTMs in these two countries. Another
major export, textiles, happens to be a highly protected sector in Argentina
with about 100 percent NTM incidence, while the NTM incidence in Brazil
on textiles is about 10 percent. The signing of the agreement should remove
these barriers to a large extent.
However, a crucial factor has been working in favour of the Indian exporters
in the recent period. After the crises in Argentina and Brazil, both these
countries have been looking for cheaper sources of imports. This requirement,
most developed countries like the US and the EU cannot fulfill. Much of
this import demand is for cheap intermediate industrial goods, which India
can offer at much cheaper rates compared to the West. Once trans-shipment
problems over a long distance are better taken care of and tariff barriers
go down, there would emerge a great potential for Indian exports in this
segment.
The Agreement offers further opportunities for export by Indian traders
of a wide range of products some of which are already exported to the
region. Drugs, pharmaceuticals and chemicals dominate India's exports
to Mercosur at present and accounts for 27.8 per cent of the total exports
to that region in 2000-01. Organic chemicals, followed by pharmaceuticals
dominate trade within this sector. This category is followed by transport
equipment, inorganic/organic/agro chemicals, plastic and linoleum products,
dye intermediates, cotton yarn fabrics, readymade garments, cotton manmade
yarn fabrics, electronic goods and coal tar. Diesel oil has been a recent
addition to India's export basket to Brazil.
Pharmaceuticals present a major area for Indian exports. Brazil provides
the single largest opportunity in this sector. Despite a recent contraction,
the Brazilian pharmaceuticals market continues to be the 10th largest
pharmaceutical market among countries that protect intellectual property.
According to ANVISA, in 2000-2001, Brazilian generics industry invested
approximately US$ 175 million. In spite of such investments, the industry
imports far more than it exports. In 2001, imports of formulations was
US$ 1.25 billion while imports of bulk drugs reached US$ 780 million,
according to the Brazilian Association of Chemicals and pharmaceuticals,
ABIQUIM. Exports of formulations from Brazil amounted to US$ 241.7 million.
As far as the sale of value added Indian formulations is concerned, figures
went up from US$ 34.35 million in 2001, to 50.5 million in 2002. There
was a decrease in the sale of organic chemicals (mainly bulk drugs) from
US$ 131.37 million in 2001, to USD 114.29 million in 2002.
An Exim Bank study, published in May 2002, indicated that India's presence
in the Mercosur region through FDI or through joint ventures has been
concentrated mainly in the pharmaceutical sector. Ranbaxy launched their
joint venture in São Paulo in pharmaceuticals in 1999. Being the
leading performer it has over 50 formulations registered. Core Health
Care/ Claris Life Sciences, has a subsidiary marketing their products
in Sao Paulo. M/s Strides Arcolabs have also formed a joint venture in
Rio de Janeiro. On 19th September Strides Arcolabs inaugurated operations
of a factory in the State of Espirito Santo for manufacturing finished
products. Torrent Pharmaceuticals launched its range of branded generics
in August, 2002. Aurobindo Pharma is about to launch its formulations,
after obtaining GMP certification. Zydus Cadila and IPCA already obtained
GMP certification.
Some pharma companies like Wockhardt, Unichem, Lupin Laboratories, NATCO
and others are planning to set up operations in Brazil. M/s Hetero, CIPLA,
IPCA Brazil, Medicorp, Alembic and others supply bulk drugs. Serum Institute
of India, Pune sold about Rs. 50 crores worth of vaccines to the Brazilian
Government company, FUNASA against an international tender in 2000.
Pharmaceuticals represent 2.57 % of Mercosur imports, while India supplied
only 16 million US$ worth of goods that amounted to 0.71% of total pharmaceuticals
import (2000). However, this saw a dramatic increase in the last two years,
and India's exports in 2001-02 amounted to 47.05 million US$. Government
sources expressed optimism regarding further boost to exports in this
sector.
Engineering goods is another key export segment for India. Some engineering
firms like Thermax, Electronic Hitech Components are also trying for investment/partnership.
The Exim Bank study also pointed out that infrastructure projects such
as electricity transmission; telecom, oil and gas also present significant
opportunities for major Indian companies such as KEC, Kalpataru Projects,
Reliance and Tatas.
Among the other exports to Mercosur, that of organic chemicals to the
Mercosur has however been coming down over the last two years. However,
exports in absolute terms remain high. Plastics and linoleum products
that India is already supplying to Mercosur, offer a potent growth area.
It occupies 5.64% of Mercosur's total imports while India supplies less
than 0.5% of the total amount imported. Transport equipment, another important
export from India to Mercosur, presents a similar scenario. This sector
represents nearly 10% of Mercosur's total imports but India supplies only
0.41% of its imports. Given their large shares in total imports of the
trade bloc, there is scope for contributing much larger exports in absolute
terms in both these sectors. Textile and products is another sector which
appears to offer major opportunities for the Indian exporter. This category
occupies around 3-4 % of Mercosur's imports. India supplies, mainly apparel
and clothing accessories, man made staple fibres and filaments, only 2
to 2.5 % of these imports. India has been looking to greatly increase
its exports in this segment. In 2000, India supplied only 1.35% of total
tanning or dyeing extracts imported by Mercosur. Though this sector represents
only about 1% of Mercosur imports, it still offers a potential for larger
exports than India is delivering at the moment.
Apart from the trade in goods, trade in services has turned out to be
a new potent area for exports. E-commerce is an arena in which Indian
companies can establish its presence in the Mercosur region. Information
technology, it has been indicated by Indian government sources, is to
be a key export segment in future. This sector has already witnessed substantial
gains in the recent period. Indian IT sector exports to Latin America
in 2002-03 was around 583 million US dollars. Though it is still a low
figure compared to India's exports to the US and Western Europe, the share
being only 5.9 % of India's total IT services export and 3.33 % of Latin
America's equivalent imports, it is growing steadily and can reach a huge
market in Mercosur.
Exports from Mercosur to India:
The Mercosur countries, on the other hand, can also export several commodities
to India, edible vegetable oil being the foremost at present. However,
geographical proximity remains the major problem with Mercosur exports.
Edible vegetable oil is the dominant single export to India, with the
largest share of 67.09 per cent in total Mercosur exports in 2001-02.
This share, which was only 3.25 per cent of total Mercosur exports in
1994, rose steeply to 28.39 per cent the next year. It continued to rise
steadily till it reached around 70 per cent in 1998 and remained there
till 2000, and this trend shows no sign of a reversal in the near future.
Due to gross inadequacies in its processing industry, India is the world's
biggest importer of edible vegetable oil. Vegetable oil constitutes as
much as 70% of India's total agricultural imports and about 2.9 % of all
Indian imports. Of total imports of vegetable oil, soyabean oil, which
is imported from Brazil and Argentina, has the second highest share. In
2001-02 the value of edible oil supplied by Brazil was 125.96 million
US$ and that by Argentina, 387.46 million US$. This implies respectively
a 40.87 and a phenomenal 88.86 % of total Brazilian and Argentinean exports
to India. A cut in duty rates from 1999-00 meant that export possibilities
for Mercosur was already going up. However, there were some later increases
to those rates though export potential for soyabean oil remains very high
and import figures for 2001-02 turned out to be 1.3 million tonnes. After
a free trade agreement, this process should get a further boost.
Other exports include petroleum and products , machinery, non-ferrous
metals, metaliferrous ores and metal scrap, crude minerals, non-electrical
machinery, leather, professional instruments, cotton and raw wool. Among
the exports of Brazil, machinery and mechanical as well as electrical
appliances and parts occupied an important 11% of total export to India
in 2001-02. Vehicles and parts (other than rail or tramways) contributed
8.82 % of total. Organic chemicals, metal products and cotton occupy shares
of 7.96, 7.32 and 6.63 % respectively. Since Edible oil occupies a huge
share (88.86%) in Argentina's exports, other items individually contribute
negligible shares. Leather and products (2.81%), Cotton (2.22%) and metal
and products (2.01%) are the other exported commodities.
As far as India's present import pattern is concerned, mineral fuels and
oils (including petroleum products) occupied a huge 30.67% in 2001-02.
Machinery and mechanical products etc contributed an 8.26%, electrical
machinery and equipments a further 6.19 %. Metal and products together
occupies about 5% of total imports. So it is obvious that the Mercosur
countries, Brazil and Argentina in particular, have a tremendous potential
in exporting these commodities to India. India offers a huge demand in
the respect of all these commodities. Exports have already begun to pick
up, and after the agreement, there is no reason why Mercosur cannot capture
a large market in these products in the Indian territory. Pearls, semi-precious
stones and imitation jewelry is another potential export for Brazil. At
present it occupies only about 2% (2001-02) of Brazilian exports to India.
But given that fact that this category occupies a large 18.19% of total
Indian imports at present, and that Brazil is supplying only 0.06% of
this import, it represents a huge potential. Given the consumer boom,
and the fact that India has been among the highest growing countries within
the developing countries, indicates that this demand is unlikely to diminish
in the near future.
After the signing of the agreement, the Indian Government stated that
India is expecting to become a big buyer of Brazilian ethanol fuel derived
from sugarcane in the near future. Brazil is the world's leading sugarcane
grower. Brazil has also been using alcohol mixed fuel for over three decades
now. A delegation from Brazil has already visited India (and China) in
2002 for discussing possibilities of export from the alcohol and the automotive
sector. One significant benefit of this for India would be a reduction
in dependence on OPEC oil, which has seen major price fluctuations over
the last few years.
Many a Pit Fall?
However, signing of treaties is not enough to boost trade between the
two regions. More on-the-ground efforts must take place before the potential
can be fully realised. A better institutional mechanism to facilitate
grievance redressal, dispute settlement, and registration problems must
be in place soon. Information flow, exchange of delegations, and participation
in trade fairs remain some of the other major areas that need to be looked
into. Specific apparatus needs to be set up on both sides for facilitating
these particular areas. Language remains another major problem. Since
Mercosur and India do not really have a language in common, communication
between trading bodies and more specifically, translation of documents
can pose major difficulties. The respective governments have to provide
support services in these areas too.
The actual trading process also requires smooth and cheap movement of
goods. Despite the official launch of direct shipping lines, the absence
in reality of direct sailing vessels or direct flights can end up making
goods lose part of their price advantages. Physical trading also requires
greater warehousing facilities and improved logistics support. Moreover,
most trading agents in countries like Brazil and Argentina ask for 180
days under open credit, which may be difficult for Indian traders to provide.
Anti–dumping duties have also been an area of dissent in the past.
For example, one of Mercosur's important trading members, Brazil, has
imposed anti dumping duty on jute bags and cycle tyres exported from India.
The Brazilian government has also been implementing a policy of non-automatic
import license requirements for certain export products of India, particularly
stationery, polyester films, garments etc. The procedure involves internal
fixing of minimum price subject to which import licenses are issued. On
the other hand, India has imposed anti-dumping duty since 1995 on Brazilian
chemical BISFENOLA, and has imposed provisional anti-dumping duty on import
of Poly-Iso-Butylene and acrylic fibre from Brazil from December 2001.
Though many such duties have been revoked in the past, like in the case
of ceramic lime export from Brazil and cycle free wheels exported from
India, these disagreements need to be sorted out faster in the future
so that full benefits of a free-trade agreement can be reaped.
The governments of India, Brazil and Argentina, on their parts, have encouraged
apex trade associations to organise seminars and delegate exchanges to
encourage greater interaction between businessmen in Mercosur and India.
For example, the Confederation of Indian Industry and Federation of Indian
Chambers of Commerce and Industry have arranged seminars and the exchange
of trade information in Brazil. From the Indian side, the market development
assistance scheme is fairly liberalised for travel to LACs, maintaining
warehouses in LACs, participation in trade fairs in LACs and opening offices
in the countries. Increased textile quotas are available against exports
to LACs. The Export Credit Guarantee Corporation has also revised the
rating of most LACs to encourage exporters to take greater risks. Similar
initiatives have also been launched by Brazil and Argentina in the recent
past.
Other region-specific efforts for undertaking a joint initiative to promote
and launch a new professional association have also gradually been building
up. A major among these is the "Latin America/Caribbean and Asia/Pacific
Economics and Business Association (LAEBA)", set up jointly by the
Inter-American Bank (IDB), through the Integration and Regional Programs
Department, and the Asian Development Bank (ADB), through the ADB Institute.
LAEBA will be dedicated to strengthening linkages between the Latin America/Caribbean
and Asia/Pacific regions, through a variety of activities including the
promotion of research. The ultimate aim is to improve trade and cooperation
between these regions. India and Mercosur should be able to reap considerable
benefits through these associations.
Despite these efforts, trade has increased but not so much in actual volume
terms. India, at present, comprises only 0.83 per cent of Mercosur's imports.
And Mercosur supplies only 1.5 % of India's imports.
Cooperation and Coexistence
Notwithstanding all the negatives, however, there stands out a large positive.
And that is the realization, that both sides need the forging of a bond
that is based on the recognition of mutual advantages. These advantages
involve not only the identification of cheaper sources of imports and
larger markets for exports. They entail other factors much broader and
deeper in their implication.
This kind of understanding is crucial for developing a south-south cooperation
that has not only a political, but also a strong economic basis. This
is important because only a joint economic perspective driven by joint
economic interests within the south can strengthen stands against exploitative
economic forces. And that requires a relative independence from northern
economies. Most developing countries are presently heavily dependent on
trade with the western world, especially for the supply of manufactured
goods. Therefore, first of all, locating and fully utilizing all trading
potential within the south, more so for industrial goods, is a must.
Second, this kind of alternative economic relationships then can create
strategic advantages in trading negotiations with other countries more
powerful than India or any of the Mercosur countries. For example, Mercosur
is going into trade agreements with the European Union and talk about
Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) is underway. Such negotiations
are immersed in controversy. Agreements on unequal terms can only be for
short-term gains. In fact, even promised or expected short-term gains
may not finally materialize for Mercosur. Such trade agreements can be
beneficial to the southern economies only if they receive actual concessions
when they give it. Based on past experiences, outcomes of compliance with
WTO trade rules have not been happy for the Latin American economies.
The US has prized open many of the Latin American economies but has not
opened up its own completely to them. The US in particular has a history
of not abiding by rules it insists on implementing. But signing alternative
agreements with other important trading partners can limit the scope for
damages by agreements such as the FTAA, and can give Mercosur, for example,
the leverage to maneuver better terms for itself. However, these potentials
between not only two but many partners within the south must be fully
developed before they can be used as tools for self protection.
In addition, gains and objectives must be complementary and not conflicting
for any trade agreement to work. Unlike the FTAA as it now stands, the
India-Mercosur agreement, arranged between comparative equals on a give
and take basis, has the potential to work given the understanding of common
goals and common perspectives.
Finally, common understandings in the field of trade can then pave the
way for joint negotiations for the south in the WTO. India and Brazil
have already set such an example. Joint negotiations like this must preclude
a convergence of interests.
In an atmosphere where western countries are intent on securing economic
hegemony with the use or misuse of trade, especially by arm-twisting the
developing nations in any way possible, locating alternative relationships
that can replace such sources and destinations of and for tradable goods
is not merely another choice, it is gradually becoming a necessity.
July 18, 2003.
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