Business Standard

US hopes to kick off trade talks under IPEF soon

Too early for India to say whether it will join the negotiatio­ns, say government sources

- ASIT RANJAN MISHRA

The 14 members of the Indo-pacific Economic Framework (IPEF) held their first informal meeting in Paris, with the US hoping to start negotiatio­ns on the trade pillar that would include contentiou­s issues such as labour and environmen­tal standards.

While United States Trade Representa­tive (USTR) Katherine Tai chaired the meeting on Saturday, India’s trade minister Piyush Goyal could not attend as he was on his way to Geneva for the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) 12th Ministeria­l Conference (MC12). India was represente­d at the meeting by the additional secretary in the Ministry of Commerce and Industry Amit Yadav. A senior government official, under the condition of anonymity, said it was too early for India to comment on whether it would join the negotiatio­ns on the trade pillar or not.

Last month, India joined 13 other countries to establish the IPEF, led by the US to counter China’s growing clout in the Indo-pacific region. The other countries that joined the IPEF are Australia, Brunei, Indonesia, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, New Zealand, the Philippine­s, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam and Fiji.

After the meeting, USTR Tai in a statement on Sunday said the US looked forward to launching negotiatio­ns under the trade pillar, which would help fuel economic activity and investment, promote sustainabl­e and inclusive economic growth, and benefit workers and consumers across the region. The joint statement released last month talked about four pillars of the IPEF: Trade; supply chains; clean energy, decarbonis­ation and infrastruc­ture; and tax and anti-corruption.

Tai hoped the US and the IPEF partners that choose to join the trade pillar “will seek to build high-standard, inclusive, free, and fair trade commitment­s and develop new and creative approaches in trade and technology policy that advance a broad set of objectives related to: labour; environmen­t; the digital economy; agricultur­e; transparen­cy and good regulatory practices; competitio­n policy; and trade facilitati­on.”

The IPEF gives India an opportunit­y to be part of the supply chain in the Asia-pacific region after it exited the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP) trade deal at the last minute. It also takes care of India’s concern about China being part of the RCEP, as the IPEF, by design, excludes China.

However, on issues such as digital commerce, labour, and environmen­tal standards, India and the US have contrastin­g views. India strongly resists putting such standards in any of the free trade agreements it signs. India didn’t join the Osaka track on the digital economy at the G20 leaders’ summit in 2019, as it remains reluctant on setting global rules on e-commerce, holding that this may deny policy space to developing countries to expand their nascent ecommerce space.

Speaking at the launch event in Tokyo last month, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had said that India would work with other members to build an “inclusive and flexible” IPEF, highlighti­ng the supply chain pillar. “The Indo-pacific Economic Framework is a declaratio­n of our collective will to make the region an engine of global economic growth. I believe that there should be three main pillars of resilient supply chains: Trust, transparen­cy, and timeliness. I am confident that this framework will help strengthen these three pillars, and pave the way for developmen­t, peace, and prosperity in the Indopacifi­c region,” Modi said, without mentioning the other three pillars of the proposed trade deal.

 ?? ?? After the meeting, United States Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai said she hoped the US and the IPEF partners that choose to join the trade pillar “will seek to build high-standard, inclusive, free, and fair trade commitment­s”
After the meeting, United States Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai said she hoped the US and the IPEF partners that choose to join the trade pillar “will seek to build high-standard, inclusive, free, and fair trade commitment­s”

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