BusinessLine (Hyderabad)

ICICI Lombard General Insurance Q4 net up 19%

- Amiti Sen

Mumbai: Largest private sector general insurer ICICI Lombard on Wednesday reported an 18.9 per cent increase in its March quarter net profit at ₹520 crore. The city-based company had reported a post-tax net profit of ₹437 crore in the year-ago period. For the fiscal year 2023-24, the company reported an 11 per cent increase in the profit after tax at ₹1,919 crore, up from ₹1,729 crore in the year-ago period. The gross direct premium income grew 22 per cent to ₹6,073 crore for the reporting quarter, up from ₹4,977 crore in the year-ago period. .

India is trying to restart work at the WTO on the longpendin­g permanent solution for public stockholdi­ng subsidies, for smooth running of programmes such as the MSP, after the recent Ministeria­l Conference in Abu Dhabi failed to deliver results, but some countries, including Brazil and the US, are trying to defer the matter, sources have said.

In a Committee on Agricultur­e (CoA) meeting on Tuesday at the WTO headquarte­rs in Geneva, New Delhi insisted that members should revisit the joint proposal made by G33African Group-ACP Group on public stockholdi­ng, which elaborates on what an acceptable permanent solution could be, and said that negotiatio­ns on the matter should conclude first without it being linked to negotiatio­ns on domestic support, a Geneva-based o£cial said.

“India said it was deeply disappoint­ed by the fact that a permanent solution on public stockholdi­ng could not be agreed to at MC13 and said members should urgently honour the mandate on the matter pending since the 2013 Bali Ministeria­l Decision,” the o£cial said.

The Bali interim solution on public stockholdi­ng o„ers India and other developing nations a peace clause which allows them to breach the WTO prescribed agricultur­e subsidy limit (10 per cent of value of production) without the risk of legal action from other members.

Last month, India invoked the peace clause for the fifth time for breaching the subsidy limit on rice in 2022-23.

PERMANENT SOLUTION

India and several other developing countries are still insisting on a permanent solution as the peace clause is ridden with di£cult conditions and onerous notificati­on requiremen­ts, leaving them open to questions and even disputes.

New Delhi pointed out at the meeting that food security was national security and since only 17 per cent of food production in the world was actually traded, trade alone could not ensure food security of developing nations.

“India emphasised that its own experience of feeding a large population and protecting livelihood­s of millions of poor farmers testified to the success of the public stockholdi­ng programmes,” the source said.

BRAZIL’S PROPOSAL

Brazil, which came up with a proposal suggesting a timeline and review process that would serve as checkpoint­s to assess the progress of the agricultur­e negotiatio­ns leading up to the next Ministeria­l, deferred the permanent solution until MC14 in 2026.

“Brazil’s handling of the public stockholdi­ng matter in its agricultur­e proposal led to protests from several members which give priority to permanent solution. This included members of the African Group, G33 developing members (including China and India), and countries from the African, Pacific and Caribbean regions (ACP),” the o£cial said.

The EU was open to Brazil’s suggestion on a timeline but said that priority should be given to some issues, particular­ly the tradedisto­rting domestic support and the long-overdue matter of public stockholdi­ng.

The US expressed caution on the way forward and said that to break the stalemate, all members must engage and be willing to compromise, the o£cial said. New Delhi, however, held on to its position that a permanent solution on public stockholdi­ng should be arrived at first before negotiatio­ns on the other agricultur­e pillars, including domestic support and market access.

 ?? REUTERS ?? LONG OVERDUE. Last month, India invoked the peace clause for the fifth time for breaching the subsidy limit on rice in 2022-23.
REUTERS LONG OVERDUE. Last month, India invoked the peace clause for the fifth time for breaching the subsidy limit on rice in 2022-23.
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