A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, October 28, 2012
Sri Lanka eyes Indian and Chinese markets to boost export
earnings
Fri, Oct 26, 2012,

Oct 26, Colombo: Sri Lanka says it will
not remain passive in the face of global downturn and is actively taking
measures to safeguard its exports and looking to expand into the Asian markets
to boost its declining export earnings to support the economic growth.
As Sri Lanka's exports to European and US markets continue to decline with the slowdown of their economies, the Sri Lankan government is taking efforts to further open both Indian and Chinese markets for its products, Sri Lanka's Minister of Industry and Commerce Rishad Bathiyutheen said recently.
"We are not going to remain passive at a time when our export markets around the world turn more challenging due to the decline in leading segments and the downward revision of GDP projections for India and China. We are under no illusions that our exports will continue to be easy as the markets become increasingly difficult. In fact, we are taking active steps to safeguard our exports," the Minister said recently at an even to promote Sri Lanka's cinnamon exports.
Explaining the immediate steps taken to safeguard Sri Lanka's exports The Minister said that he had been personally meeting and consulting many top Chamber members in the country with regard to Sri Lanka's future exports strategies.
Fri, Oct 26, 2012,
As Sri Lanka's exports to European and US markets continue to decline with the slowdown of their economies, the Sri Lankan government is taking efforts to further open both Indian and Chinese markets for its products, Sri Lanka's Minister of Industry and Commerce Rishad Bathiyutheen said recently.
"We are not going to remain passive at a time when our export markets around the world turn more challenging due to the decline in leading segments and the downward revision of GDP projections for India and China. We are under no illusions that our exports will continue to be easy as the markets become increasingly difficult. In fact, we are taking active steps to safeguard our exports," the Minister said recently at an even to promote Sri Lanka's cinnamon exports.
Explaining the immediate steps taken to safeguard Sri Lanka's exports The Minister said that he had been personally meeting and consulting many top Chamber members in the country with regard to Sri Lanka's future exports strategies.
As a result of the consultations during the
last few months, Sri Lanka has taken a new initiative to set up a Consultative
Committee on Market Diversification representing the interests of a wider cross
section of the economy, Minister Bathiyutheen said.
"Also for the first time we held direct
consultations with our leading exporters last September to find solutions to
their issues and received very good responses. We also revived our exporters�
forum and the third forum in the series was successfully concluded in July. But
more importantly, as part of moving from simple exports to more complex
products, we are looking at actively joining Regional Production Networks so
that our exports become more market driven," the Minister further described the
government's measures.
He said the government's efforts to further
open both Indian and Chinese markets, which are seen as difficult segments, have
become successful.
European Union and the United States are
Sri Lanka's largest export partners accounting for 60 percent of Sri Lanka's
exports. With the economic crisis in those regions, Sri Lanka's export earnings
have declined 5.7 percent in the first eight months of this year compared to the
same period last year, according to the Central Bank's most recent review.
For the month of August exports earnings
declined by 13 percent and the income from food sector declined 45
percent.
The International Monetary Fund recently
urged Sri Lanka to woo Asian markets to boost its declining export earnings to
support the economic growth.
Koshy Mathai, the IMF resident
representative for Sri Lanka and Maldives has advised Sri Lanka to focus on
enhancing trade with India and China to take advantage of those growing Asian
economies and to diversify against shocks coming from economic slowdowns in
other parts of the world.
Despite having a successful free trade
agreement with India since 1998 Sri Lanka's total exports in 2011 to India
accounted for just 4.9 percent while exports to China accounted for only around
1 percent.
"Failing to take advantage of the
opportunities provided by the economic growth by those areas (in China and
India) today would be ashamed, would definitely be giving up an opportunity for
Sri Lanka to go forward," the IMF official pointed out in August.
The IMF lowered the economic growth
forecast for Sri Lanka to a 6.75 percent this year, slower than the 7.2 percent
projected by the country's Central Bank.