In order to realise the full implementation of SAFTA, he said the Summit should mandate the Finance Ministers to discuss a mechanism to promote capital flows and investments and to see progress that would result in ultimate scrapping of the SAFTA Sensitive List.
Singh said industries in the South Asian region have to learn to compete if their economies were to have a future in the globalised world.
"We can all benefit from our respective comparative advantages. These include our hydro-power and natural resource endowments, possibilities of earnings from transit, marine resources, our scientific and technological base and above all our young population which will drive consumption and investment in the years ahead. We should expedite the finalisation of the SAARC Agreement on Investment," he said.
Singh, who last week attended the G20 Summit, referred to the acute crisis in the global economy, which he said has imposed a fresh and entirely uncalled for burden on developing countries.
"We hope that the leaders of the major economies, particularly in the Eurozone, will show the wisdom and will that are required to revive the global economy," he said.
However, he said that the world economy was going to take time to recover.
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