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Editorial WorksCollection ReviewsCollection Journal ArticlesCollection ReportsCollection Monograph ChaptersCollection Keynote AddressesCollection MonographsCollection Working papersCollection Item The Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture: Implications for Sri Lanka(Institute of Policy Studies, 1996, 1996) Athukorala, Prema-Chandr; Kelegama, SamanThe paper begins with an introduction to the agricultural sector in the Sri Lankan economy (Section 2). Section 3 provides an account of the current agricultural production and trade policies while paying attention to their roots in Sri Lanka's economic policy history and the related socio-political considerations. Section 4 is the core of the paper. It examines Sri Lanka's commitments to date to the URAA and constraints to further compliance with URAA provisions, followed by an assessment of the impact of URAA on world agricultural trade from the perspective of global trading opportunities for Sri Lanka. The paper ends in Section 5 with some concluding remarks.Item Policy Issues on Promoting Backward Linkages from the Garment Industry in Sri Lanka(Institute of Policy Studies, 1996, 1996) Kelegama, Saman; Foley, FritzThis paper examines the slow growth of local supplies to the garment industry in Sri Lanka. We have shown that the overall investment environment in Sri Lanka and international demand patterns constrain the formation of competitive local producers of fabric and garment accessories. We have also shown that building and maintaining sources of competitive advantage among producers of garment inputs are crucial to their development and viability in a highly integrated global economic environment. From the Sri Lankan garment industry experience and from the available evidence from other countries, we have argued, in general, that the empasis on backward linkages industrialization is somewhat misplaced. Changes in the global environment and international demand patterns have made backward linkage effects less powerful than they were for import-substitution industrialization strategy in a closed economy. Although local supplies are useful and vluable, they cannot function unless conditions exist which allow them to be competitive.