Business community urges OIC to encourage intra-trade among member states

ISLAMABAD - Pakistani business community on Sunday urged the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) to encourage intra trade among member countries for countering offset looming global threat caused by COVID-19 pandemic on their economies.
Chairing a round table conference on “Organisation of Islamic Cooperation Conference Trade Prospects” organised in Lahore by Meher Kashif Younis, former senior Vice President Lahore Chamber, President SAARC Chamber of Commerce and Industry Iftikhar Ali Malik said OIC was the second largest inter-governmental orgnisation after United Nations with a large membership of 57 states covering four continents, whereas its intra trade between 2019-20 registered a decrease of 21.2 percent ranging from $700.1 billion to $522.8 billion in 2019. He pointed out that during COVID-19, the world economy had witnessed an unprecedented turbulence that impacted different crucial sectors in which several countries were recovering gradually with slow pace but not at the same level everywhere.
He said whole of OIC was blessed with huge natural resources and minerals deposits but their share in global economy and even within member countries was not upto inherited potentials. Iftikhar Ali Malik said trade facilitation activities were of great importance to promote intra-OIC trade and investment. He said the majority of tariff barriers were related to sanitary and phytosanitary measures, which constituted a burden for exporters.
Non-tariff measures affected more than 50 percent of companies in member states especially technical measures and measures related to procedures. Speaking on the occasion, Meher Kashif Younis, the conference host, opined that for gradually lowering these obstacles, member states and OIC Institutions should focus more on Trade Facilitation activities, i.e. training on rules of origin, product certification, mutual recognition of standards, establishment of commercial single windows, modernisation of Customs administrations, sharing of successful experiences ,improvement of the services of Trade and Investment Promotion Organs and organisation of intra-OIC trade and investment promotion programmes.
He said OIC member states have signed several bilateral, regional and multilateral trade and investment agreements to better regulate trade and investment flows and liberalise international trade transactions with local incentives. Younis said states applied more restrictive domestic measures to companies than those encountered with commercial partners.
He said indeed the most important measures applied by member states included: import tariffs, financial subsidies, export subsidies, export tariffs, non-tariff import measures, import licensing, safeguard measures, anti-dumping measures, non-tariff export measures, import quotas, local content, financial incentives for FDI, export licensing, internal import taxes, import bans and export quotas. Shahid Nazir, member executive committee Lahore chamber, while sharing his experience said despite these barriers, member states had also initiated trade facilitation measures to streamline foreign trade transaction procedures like establishment of singles, windows, the construction of road, rail and airport infrastructure, and the automation of customs administration, the exchange of electronic data inter-agency stakeholders of trade and the elimination of several foreign trade documents.
He said for better develop intra-OIC trade, it was appropriate for member states to activate the operationalisation of the OIC trade preferential system either through the normal or fast-track way taking into account the evolution of the environment of regional trade agreements and to increase the organisation of trade and investment promotion activities to develop markets for products and services in these countries.
On the other hand, the countries that had not signed or ratified yet the TPS-OIC, should do it at the earliest, and move to the stage of its implementation, Shahid Nazir concluded. Rehmat Ullah Javed, an internationally acclaimed Small and Medium Entrepreneur expert, two research scholars from School of Communication Studies Punjab University Muhammad Umer Ibrahim and Ms Humna Rathore also shared their views on the occasion.

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