Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

India, US seek to resolve trade issues

- Yashwant Raj feedback@livemint.com ▪

WASHINGTON: India and the United States are seeking to address and resolve various trade issues, including tariff slapped by the Trump administra­tion on steel and aluminium imports and the price-cap imposed by New Delhi on medical devices, that have piled up between the two countries over time.

Commerce minister Suresh Prabhu set the process rolling with a three-day tour of the US concluding Tuesday during which he met US commerce secretary Wilbur Ross, US trade representa­tive Robert Lighthizer, US agricultur­e secretary Sonny Perdue, senators and industry representa­tives.

“All the issues are being discussed together and … There is a general agreement that we will (deal) with all these issues and try to move on,” the minister said to reporters on Tuesday. He was replying to questions whether his discussion­s with US officials included issues of steel and aluminium tariff and the Generalize­d System of Preference­s, a US trade-promotion scheme of which India is a major beneficiar­y. The goal is to put these issues together in a “package” for discussion and resolution and not deal with them in a piecemeal one issue after another and one at a time, an Indian official said on the background to explain the move.

A delegation of Indian officials will arrive shortly to build on the minister’s meetings, which Indian officials described as “very positive”.

“It was agreed that Indian and US officials would meet at a senior level at an early date to discuss various issues of interest to both sides and carry forward the discussion­s in a positive, constructi­ve and result-oriented manner,” the Indian embassy said in a statement.

The Indian team was particular­ly pleased with meetings with Ross and Lighthizer, the two top officials of the Trump administra­tion who are entrusted with the execution of US president Donald Trump’s trade agenda, which has upset long-time allies and rivals alike.

India is among countries impacted by the US tariffs of 25% and 10% on steel and aluminium imports, and after failing to obtain a waiver from the Trump administra­tion, it has gone to the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) seeking consultati­ons, the mandatory first step towards arbitratio­n, and compensati­on for lost revenues.

India is especially concerned about pressures from the administra­tion to remove, what the US and its industry claim are, trade- barriers on the importatio­n of certain dairy products and pricecap on medical devices in return for continuing to extend preferenti­al treatment to India under trade scheme Generalize­d System of Preference­s (GSP).

India is the top beneficiar­y of this scheme under which some imports from selected developing countries are allowed to enter the US at zero duty. In 2017, India exported $5.6 billion worth of goods to the US under this scheme, which was more than a fifth of the total worth of Indian exports to the US.

India’s eligibilit­y to continue under the scheme is being reviewed, and as a part of that process, the US trade representa­tive’s office has scheduled a public hearing on June 19.

The two countries have also taken each other to WTO on several trade disputes, over market access, state subsidies and tariff. India has also threatened to levy retaliator­y measures — against steel and aluminium duties — worth around $165.56 million on a range of American goods.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Commerce minister Suresh ▪
Prabhu
MINT/FILE Commerce minister Suresh ▪ Prabhu

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