The issue would be taken up with US authorities during upcoming bilateral trade talks, Secretary Commerce Zafar Mahmood said in an exclusive interview with The Express Tribune. Both sides are scheduled to meet in the last week of April to hold talks under Trade and Investment Framework Agreement. “Up till now, the Reconstruction Opportunity Zone bill has not made any progress and we are pursuing alternate lines with US,” Mahmood said.
Promised in the aftermath of the 2005 earthquake, the bill has stalled, primarily due to domestic concerns in the US.
The bill envisioned creating jobs in Pakistan and Afghanistan by providing duty-free access to the US for goods made in the approved zones within the two countries. “We will certainly bring on table certain suggestions which could either revive ROZs or propose alternate arrangements through which the US may pass on trade benefits to Pakistan,” Mahmood said, without elaborating on the alternative arrangements. He said the alternatives will depend on what the US was prepared to consider.
“We have certain ideas but we will only bring them on table if there is certain receptivity in America,” he said. He hoped for a better atmosphere at the trade talks due to gradual improvement in bilateral relations.
A trade expert suggested that Pakistan could ask the US to allow for import of those items at concessionary duties which are not manufactured in America.
Pak-India trade ties
Talking about greater regional integration, Mahmood said there was possibility of linking Far East Asia with Central Asia provided that India and Pakistan resolve their disputes and move firmly, surely, and steadily on the path to normalise their overall relationship.
“I think then the atmosphere would be created in which the government will look more favourably at this kind of request,” he said. When asked about granting India transit access to Kabul via land, Mahmood said it would be a bilateral arrangement but India has not officially asked Pakistan for it.
“If and when they table this issue, the government will decide on its own merit,” he said. Exporters are keenly looking forward to normalisation of trade ties, and eying the ten times larger Indian market, he said. Sectors that have production facilities are the ones feeling threatened by Indian goods, he added. I
f need arises, Pakistan can invoke safeguard laws to protect the industry but the industry should educate itself about the efficacy of the law, Mahmood said.
Published in The Express Tribune, March 9th, 2012.
COMMENTS (11)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
99% comments are always against US.
@Khan:
Excellent answer bro. The US, with its history of duplicity and malefecence dating back to its very inception (wealthy slave-owners fighting for freedom?!), is ripe for a dose of its own medicine.
There is nothing particularly right-wing about calling a spade a spade - and after a decade-long steady stream of reports emerging from Iraq and Afghanistan documenting sub-human acts of bestial savagery by US forces, it's little wonder that there are some (I daresay many) who consider the US to be lacking in the basic characteristics expected of the average human.
Hardly a massive revelation, is it?
H
@Harry Stone: No generalizations Harry. It just reflects on your own personality.
@Harry Stone: Saying something is different than doing something or Is it not? First I can't see any where Senate's opposition leader saying any such thing .. even if some one does I don't agree with it personally. Many right wing politicians say things in the US but no one makes a fuss about it. Dana Rohrabacher, Is entitled to his own views just like anyone else but it was not just an opinion he is trying to do whatever he can to break Pakistan. Let's see if you guys will keep calm If the EU MEPs discusses and presents a bill in favor of disintegration of the United States?
@John B: Could you please post link to that news item ... Senate opposition leader is Mian Raza Rabbani.
Those remarks were attributed to Iran's Ayatollah Khatami and here is the link
Why are you bothering if you're actually going to do that pipeline project? I think that's one of the things you'd be cut off from anyways.
@Khan:
It seems as a PAK you want to have it both ways. One person in PAK says something and it is only one person. At the same time in the US a congressman introduce a resolution and all of PAK goes nuts........
I find your reply to be very typical of PAK.
@Khan: Understand, but he is a senate opposition leader, not some TTP spokesman or some right wing radio host in US.
In politics certain decorum is expected and he will be meeting US officials at various capacities throughout his career and his words will come to bite him, and PAK.
@John B: Just because a single person said something which is his own opinion, does that mean 180 million people of this country have to agree with him?
In an another news section the opposition leader of senate said "Americans are not humans ....."; so, why seek concession with non humans then?
What will pak export to the US?