Monday, 28 October 2013 01:23
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“Lanka now R-65 in Global Competitiveness Index”: Rishad
“22 FTAs sped up our GDP growth”: Chile’s Barros
Lanka-Chile trade at $ 45 m
Signalling a positive turn for its export diversification moves, Sri Lanka has notched itself up in the latest Global Competitiveness Index. No less than 22 FTAs have helped Sri Lanka’s topmost Southern hemispheric trading partner to lift itself off from a ‘backyard GDP’ and speed up to one of the best economies in South America today.
”I am pleased to say that Sri Lanka has improved to Rank 65 from its previous 68 in the Global Competitiveness Report 2013-2014. We stand just below the Russian Federation in this ranking. The same index says that Sri Lanka leads among SAARC countries on competitiveness levels,” said Minister of Industry and Commerce of Sri Lanka Rishad Bathiudeen on 25 October at the Mt. Lavinia Hotel, addressing the Seminar ‘From Agriculture to Agribusiness: The Pathway of Chile’.
Joining the session were Sergio Rodriguez (Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry Engineering, University Catholic of Chile), and Mano Selvanathan (Honorary Consul of Chile in Sri Lanka). The session was attended by officials from EDB, private sector reps including Cargills, and academia and officials from Chile’s Delhi Embassy.
Leading trade partner
Bathiudeen revealed: “Chile is one of Sri Lanka’s leading trade partners in the South American region. Bilateral trade between Chile and Sri Lanka stood at $ 45 m in 2012. Our top two exports to Chile are from the agro sector – that is, tea and spices. The bilateral agreement, for agricultural trade, and cooperation, between both countries, signed in Colombo, in 2007, strengthened our historic links, further. We also see Chile as a platform to access other markets, in the South American region.
“We congratulate Chile for getting selected as the highest ranked Latin American nation by the World Economic Forum in its latest Global Competitiveness Report 2013-2014. This achievement is despite the challenging international markets.”
“Back in the 1980s we were backward but after opening our economy and entering to many FTAs, our GDP grew steadily and now Chile is a global player. As a result, our exports grew and today we are the fifth largest exporter of wine in the world,” said Cristian Barros, the New Delhi based Ambassador of Chile accredited to Sri Lanka.
“Sri Lanka and Chile trade cooperation goes back a long way despite being geographically distant and of course, 90% of Chileans drink Ceylon Tea,” he added.