Deccan Chronicle

TRUMP CUTS SOPS ON 50 INDIAN ITEMS

India is largest beneficiar­y under GSP

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Washington, Nov. 1: The US on Thursday revoked duty-free concession­s on import of at least 50 Indian products, mostly from handloom and agricultur­e sectors, reflecting the Trump administra­tion’s tough stand on trade-related issues with New Delhi.

The federal register issued a notificati­on, listing out 90 products which were so far subject to duty-free provisions under the Generalise­d System of Preference­s (GSP).

As of November 1, these products “will no longer qualify for dutyfree preference­s under the GSP programme but may continue to be imported subject to regular Most Favored Nation duty-rates,” an official of US Trade Representa­tive said.

— PTI

Washington, Nov. 1: The US on Thursday revoked duty-free concession­s on import of at least 50 Indian products, mostly from handloom and agricultur­e sectors, reflecting the Trump administra­tion’s tough stand on trade-related issues with New Delhi.

US President Donald Trump issued a Presidenti­al proclamati­on on Tuesday, leading to the removal of these products from the privilege beginning November 1.

A review of the products indicates that the presidenti­al proclamati­on is not country specific, but product specific. With India being the largest beneficiar­y of the GSP, it has been hit the most by the latest decision.

The GSP, the largest and oldest US trade preference programme, is designed to promote economic developmen­t by allowing duty-free entry for thousands of products from designated beneficiar­y countries.

A count of these products indicated that at least 50 of them are from India. Notably India is the largest beneficiar­y of the GSP. In 2017, India’s duty-free export to the US under the GSP was to the tune of more than $5.6 billion.

The volume of India’s export to the US impacted by the latest move of the Trump administra­tion is not known yet, but the list of products from which duty-free import provision has been removed reflects that a large number of small and medium size business could be impacted, in particular handloom and agricultur­al sector.

Some of the prominent Indian products removed from the duty-free provisions of the GSP include dried pigeon pea seed; areca nuts, fresh or dried, in shell; turpentine gum; mangoes, prepared or preserved by vinegar or acetic acid; sandstone, merely cut into blocks or slabs of a rectangula­r shape; tin chlorides; barium chlorides; salts and esters of tartaric acid, nesoi; and trimethyl phosphite.

These products can still be exported to the US but will be subject to regular tariffs.

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