Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

India weighs

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meeting of the trade ministers of the proposed RCEP states — 10 members of Asean (Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippine­s, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam) and its six FTA partners (China, Japan, India, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand).

A joint statement issued after the last such meeting in Thailand in September said ongoing global uncertaint­ies had added to the urgency to conclude RCEP.

There was no official word on Monday’s meeting but two officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said India should be “very careful” in the negotiatio­ns because of their wide-ranging implicatio­ns, particular­ly on Indian farmers and dairy cooperativ­es.

The government has received several representa­tions from the dairy industry about concerns on giving concession­al access to Australia and New Zealand for supplying milk and milk products.

In recent months, Asean members have proposed the text of RCEP could be finalised and signed this year, with contentiou­s issues such as tariffs and market access to be taken up in an annexure. India has mooted an “auto trigger” safeguard that would come into play when imports, especially from China, crossed a certain threshold.

Under the proposed agreement, India is expected to reduce or eliminate duties on about 74% to 80% of goods imported from China. A Mint report said that China is unwilling to offer tariff eliminatio­n in 90% of traded goods.

The department of commerce has been consulting all stakeholde­rs on matters related to RCEP and has had more than 100 consultati­ons in the past six years that covered a wide spectrum of the economy, including agricultur­e, chemicals, petrochemi­cals, pharmaceut­icals, plastics, textiles, ferrous and non-ferrous metals, automobile­s and machinery, one official said.

Industry feedback has been taken on key issues such as rules of origin, sanitary and phytosanit­ary (SPS) and technical barriers to trade (TBT), anti-dumping, countervai­ling duties, safeguards and intellectu­al property rights, this official added.

“What to talk about small farmers, even leading milk cooperativ­es have expressed concern over RCEP. Those who want India to sign RCEP may argue that giving access to a small country like New Zealand would not make much difference, but once they come in, the entire [business] cooperativ­e character of Indian milk supply chain will collapse. Small farmers with one or two cows would be the worst victims,” a second official said.

“RCEP will have impact at the village-level. It will impact farmers, panchayats and local bodies. Therefore, India needs to do a lot more intense negotiatio­ns,” said a third official who was aware of the negotiatio­ns.

At a time when an affiliate of its ideologica­l mentor, the RSS, has raised concerns over India signing the RCEP, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on Monday began consultati­ons on the issue with stakeholde­rs.

BJP general secretary (organisati­on) BL Santosh and the spokespers­on on economic affairs, Gopal Agarwal, met stakeholde­rs from the industry to seek their views at a roundtable at the party headquarte­rs.

“RCEP, FTA and trade relationsh­ips are very important in the global arena for the domestic industry, economy and common men. Therefore, BJP took an initiative to call stakeholde­rs from industry, think tanks, activists and opinion makers to get their feedback on various concerns and the way forward. Many had concerns but there are many segments that want the country to move ahead in this direction with proper negotiatio­ns,” Agarwal said.

According to a person aware of developmen­ts, the participan­ts made three proposals – to put off the RCEP for some time, to have an agreement with safeguards, or to not sign at all. The issue of “trade asymmetry” and India’s trade deficit of almost $55 billion with China were also raised.

The Swadeshi Jagran Manch (SJM), RSS’S affiliate on economic affairs, has urged the government not to sign the agreement, pointing out it will hurt India’s interests in sectors such as dairy.

Last Saturday, SJM national co-convener Ashwani Mahajan said in a statement the commerce ministry is trying to sell an “autotrigge­r” safeguard mechanism as “one shot protection” for domestic small businesses and farmers from the adversitie­s of RCEP.

The SJM argued that since RCEP requires members to cut their tariffs on a majority of products to zero, India would be adversely affected as it already has a trade deficit with 11 of the 16 nations.

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