Expert raise concern over implementation of latest trade deal between Nepal, China
Apr 01, 2022
Kathmandu [Nepal], April 1 : Experts have raised concern over the implementation of the latest trade deal between Nepal and China as Beijing has been barring exports from Nepal for years for over two years citing COVID-19 restrictions.
China has agreed to provide duty-free treatment to goods of Nepali origin covering 98 per cent tariff lines, reported The Kathmandu Post.
The two countries exchanged letters on the preferential treatment besides signing other deals during the recent visit to Kathmandu by Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi.
Experts however questioned the workability of the pact saying, "For more than two years, China has been preventing Nepali products from entering the country on the pretext of COVID-19. Exports from Nepal to China have almost come down to zero," Dinesh Shrestha, vice-president of the Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce and Industry, told the Kathmandu Post.
According to the Nepal Trade Information Portal of the Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Supplies, China has been providing zero tariff treatment to about 8,000 goods originating in Nepal. These products account for 95 percent of Nepal's exports to China.
"The question is about the implementation part. Why have Nepali exports to China fallen sharply?" said Shrestha. "And again, it is a matter of how serious the Chinese government will be in implementing the recent agreement."
Nepal's exports to China stood at a mere Rs 1 billion in the last fiscal year 2020-21 ended mid-July, while imports amounted to a staggering Rs 233.92 billion. The trade deficit with China amounted to Rs 232.90 billion in the last fiscal year, reported The Kathmandu Post.
Nepal's main exports to China consist of incense sticks, handicraft (metal and wooden), noodles, pashmina, readymade garment, leather goods, rudraksha, tanned skin, tea, wheat flour and woollen carpet, among other products.
China is Nepal's second largest trading partner, accounting for 14 per cent of its total trade. But Nepal suffers a huge deficit in its trade with its northern neighbour.
Moreover, the closure of the Chinese border since early 2020 has affected a large number of Nepali entrepreneurs exporting goods to China. China closed its border points due to the pandemic in January 2020, and they have not been fully operationalized since then, reported The Kathmandu Post.