Business Standard

India-US talks on February 14: Oil to dominate agenda

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y More on business-standard.com

A pledge by India to reduce trade imbalance through greater crude imports, US firms’ concerns on the new ecommerce policy and retaliator­y tariffs imposed by both nations will dominate the agenda on February 14, when officials sit down for the IndiaUS Commercial dialogue.

Being held after a hiatus of a year, the annual talks will see Commerce and Industry Minister Suresh Prabhu discuss trade policy difference­s with US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross. India expects Washington DC to push hard against the tough rules on foreign direct investment­s in e-commerce that have rattled US giants like Walmart. Officials suggested the US was demanding a clear indication from India on reducing the trade deficit. The US is also in the process of terminatin­g the Generalise­d System Preference­s, which has allowed duty-free access for 3,500 Indian products to US markets. Officials added India might not put up a fight in this regard.

Fleeting chance

Last year, both countries had given a wide berth to contentiou­s trade issues in the 2+2 dialogue, instead focus on defence and foreign affairs. The predecesso­r to the talks, the erstwhile ‘India-US Strategic and Commercial Dialogue’, had started in 2015. However, after two annual rounds, a decision was taken to carve out trade issues into a separate annual discussion — ‘India-US Commercial Dialogue’.

In the first edition of trade talks, Prabhu had gone to Washington DC in October 2017. But both the nations coming to repeated blows over trade issues throughout 2018 had stopped talks from materialis­ing.

US President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has dragged India to the World Trade Organizati­on multiple times over New Delhi’s exportprom­otion schemes and restrictio­ns on solar cell imports. India, too, has lodged a case against steel and aluminium tariffs imposed by the US.

The latest decision to again defer the already announced tariff duty hikes was taken in an effort to create goodwill and bring the US to the discussion table, a senior commerce department official said. New Delhi has decided to postpone the tariff hikes again till March 2.

Trade package

Sources said a bilateral trade package is being worked on. This will include changes in import duties on US informatio­n and communicat­ion technology products, and preferenti­al tariffs for Indian exports, apart from data localisati­on norms. However, the upcoming talks will steer clear of this, as US policy dictates that only the powerful US Trade Representa­tive's office discuss such matters, an official said.

India's relation with its second-largest trade partner has been choppy during the Donald Trump presidency. While exports to stateside have grown — $47.87 billion worth of Indian shipments reached US ports in 2017-18, up from the $ 42.21 billion a year before — America’s irritation with a wider trade deficit has also grown.

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