Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

‘Come to India’: US trade deal not inked, but open for business

- Yashwant Raj and Rezaul H Laskar letters@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON/NEWDELHI: India and the US were unable to stitch together a mini trade deal during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit despite intense last-minute negotiatio­ns but he sent out a message that India remains open for business and investment.

Commerce minister Piyush Goyal travelled to New York for negotiatio­ns with US trade representa­tive Robert Lighthizer after an earlier round of talks in New Delhi featuring US ambassador Kenneth Juster, and it was widely expected that the two sides would announce the limited deal during the bilateral meeting between Modi and President Donald Trump.

People familiar with developmen­ts said the negotiatio­ns had mostly centred around India’s price cap on medical devices such as stents, access for American dairy products to the Indian market, India’s duties on informatio­n and communicat­ions technology products and withdrawal of benefits under the Generalise­d System of Preference­s programme. The deal could not be worked out as the two sides were unable to bridge all the gaps, the people quoted above said.

Goyal continued his discussion­s with US officials and Trump has said the two sides expect to conclude a trade deal soon. “Significan­t progress has been made on a number of issues and we narrowed the areas of difference­s. The two leaders were optimistic about reaching some kind of an agreement in the near future,” foreign secretary Vijay Gokhale said after the Modi-Trump meet.

Atman Trivedi, a former department of commerce official in the Obama administra­tion who is now managing director at Hills & Company, said a deal, if reached at all, will be “targeted” and “modest”, but the two sides could come to a “trade understand­ing” that would be just as significan­t.

“These initial steps can and should pave the way for progress on a broader basket of issues, including intellectu­al property, the digital economy, and e-commerce,” he said. “But this will require political will and a sustained, discipline­d approach by both countries.”

However, Modi’s focus during a roundtable with CEOs of energy companies in Houston, and the Bloomberg Global Business Forum and another roundtable with CEOs of 40 leading companies such as Mastercard, Visa and Walmart in New York was plugging India as a trade and investment destinatio­n.

Following the roundtable with energy firms, India’s largest LNG importer Petronet signed an MoU with Houstonbas­ed Tellurian to invest $2.5 billion for 18% equity in the US energy major’s Driftwood project and negotiate the purchase of five million tonnes of gas per annum over 40 years.

Modi highlighte­d India’s economic and political strengths and pledged personal interventi­on to address any issues that affected investors. He attributed India’s growth story to the “rarest of rare” combinatio­n of four key factors – democracy, demography, demand and decisivene­ss – and spoke about his government’s respect for the business world and creation of wealth, as well as steps to spur investment­s, such as the “revolution­ary” decision to slash corporate tax from 30% to 22%.

When concerns about India’s data localisati­on plans were raised at the New York roundtable with 40 top CEOs, Modi reportedly said his government will work to create a balance between the security of data of Indian citizens and business interests.

India’s growing middle class and population of 1.3 billion make it an appealing destinatio­n for US firms but concerns have grown in recent months about new data localisati­on and e-commerce initiative­s.

“The prime minister gave almost two hours of time and listened to a lot of the ideas as well as issues, and I think people were quite candid about some of the things they think India needs to do, and he was very receptive to hear those,” US-India Business Council president Nisha Biswal told CNBC.

The slowdown of the Indian economy, consistenc­y in policymaki­ng, increasing access to India’s retail banking sector and providing liquidity were other key issues raised in the meeting. Modi tried to calm concerns about the slowdown, according to CNBC.

Modi also highlighte­d his government’s move to make India a $5-trillion economy in five years and outlined plans to spend $1.3 trillion on new physical infrastruc­ture and billions of dollars on social infrastruc­ture. These initiative­s, he said, represente­d investment opportunit­ies for global businesses.

“Our people are rapidly defeating poverty, moving up the economic ladder with increasing purchasing power. Thus, if you want to invest in a market where there is a scale, come to India,” he said.

With Trump repeatedly targeting India over tariffs in recent months, even a limited trade deal will go a long way in addressing difference­s in trade issues that stand in sharp contrast to the otherwise robust India-US cooperatio­n in areas such as security, counter-terrorism and defence.

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