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FTP
Welcome, But Need To Tighten Regulatory Framework
New
Delhi, April 16, 2008
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CUTS
International, a leading economic policy research
and advocacy group has welcomed the forward
looking supplement on the Foreign Trade Policy,
2008, in particular the thrust on gender
empowerment, for the first time since the policy
was adopted some time ago.
“It is
a forward looking strategy which has provided
several incentives for women’s engagement and
empowerment in our export efforts, and will thus
aid poverty reduction efforts of the government”,
said Pradeep S Mehta, CUTS Secretary General in a
press release issued here today.
The
FTP recommends that the Government will provide
incentives to exporters who recruit more women,
provide better facilities to them and also pay
equal wages. Further, the policy will also offer
incentives to women entrepreneurs.
Sometime ago, in a study on SEZs done by CUTS
International for the Department of Commerce, it
was found that women were the greater
beneficiaries. The study showed that some units
had also undertaken special education programmes
for women in the communities surrounding the SEZ.
However, Mehta lamented the fact that much of our
exports are hamstrung by cartels of different
nature and that there is no adequate regulatory
framework or a competition agency to deal with
them.
These
cartels do not operate only in the goods sector,
such as cement, steel and other intermediates,
there are a large number of cartels in the
transport business. These exist at the local
level, where truck unions force companies to send
out goods only through their members and collect
hafta as well. The same exporting industry also
suffer from shipping liner cartels which carry
their goods overseas. In fact even the goods that
they import for consumption are artificially
priced high due to similar cartels operating
outside.
Turning to the problem of black marketing and
hoarding, Mehta said: “The government at the
centre speaks about taking strong action, but they
can not do much. It is the states who have to
implement the laws, and their track record is
rather poor”. He added, “unless the central
government rewards better performing states, the
will to crack down on black marketers will remain
merely on paper”.
In
conclusion, Mehta said that the Government has to
nationalize the export movement and counter the
cynicism of people as to why an export-led growth
strategy can lead to more jobs. In this context,
it will be useful to set in motion the Inter State
Trade Council, which was announced when the FTP
was launched four years ago, but has not happened.
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