From Evidence to Policy Supporting Nepal’s Trade Integration Strategy
This note looks at the services sector and its dual role for Nepal: as a direct source of exports, and as a provider of key inputs for other sectors of the economy. It identifies sources of potential for services exports, and key obstacles for improved efficiency in the sector. It also provides some...
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Zusammenfassung: | This note looks at the services sector
and its dual role for Nepal: as a direct source of exports,
and as a provider of key inputs for other sectors of the
economy. It identifies sources of potential for services
exports, and key obstacles for improved efficiency in the
sector. It also provides some policy recommendations to
alleviate the observed obstacles, and presents examples of
good practices from across the world in terms of services
trade performance and reforms. Three of the 12 sectors
identified in Nepal’s National Trade Integration Strategy
2015 (NTIS 2015) are services-related. This note assesses
Nepal’s trade potential in services, and identifies
actionable policy measures that are needed for Nepal to
achieve this potential. The framework used to assess Nepal’s
trade potential in services starts from the idea that
services play a dual role for building export
competitiveness in the Nepalese economy. The remainder of
this note proceeds as follows. Section I analyzes the direct
services export performance of Nepal’s exports relative to
comparator countries, when measuring exports in gross or
value added terms. It takes a detailed look at performance
of Nepal’s priority export potential services sectors.
Section II analyzes the indirect services export
performance, when services are used as inputs for other
sectors’ exports. It takes a perspective of services for
cross-cutting export competitiveness. This analysis is
undertaken in value-added terms. Section III details the
policy implications that arise from this analysis, taking
both a cross-cutting and sector-specific point of view. |
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