Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Data, digital issues set to be part of deal

- Pramit Pal Chaudhuri

The proposed minitrade deal between India and the US is set to be resurrecte­d in a larger and more modern form. While more restrained than US President Donald Trump’s expectatio­ns of a “fantastic, biggest ever trade deal,” a number of Indian and US officials familiar with the developmen­t say the new agenda will be more forward-looking.

Talks may begin as early as April and will prioritise data and digital issues, the people said on condition of anonymity.

The original plan was to put together a small, quick deal for this week’s summit.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi was eager: his conversati­ons with Trump have often run aground on trade issues. The US trade representa­tive’s office went along because it was sold as crucial to the summit’s success.

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But between America First and Make in India, even the mini-deal was going to be difficult. Both sides played switch and bait with the agenda.

The US kept adding more agricultur­al items with an eye to the US election.

US officials complain that the Indian side took electronic­s off the agenda.

New Delhi was taken aback when the US declared India ineligible for the generalise­d system of preference­s, a market access agreement that they wanted to rejoin after being taken off it last year.

US trade representa­tive Robert Lighthizer, say US officials, was unenthusia­stic about a walnuts and chicken legs deal. While Trump saw these as important, Lighthizer saw the battles over e-commerce, data localisati­on and digital payments as the real trade issues.

These would determine the future of India-us economic relationsh­ip.

He pushed for a digital dialogue to be added, but was rebuffed by a New Delhi which felt its domestic data policies needed time to be sorted out.

The mini-trade deal died the instant Trump decided the giant crowd in Ahmedabad audience was sufficient reason to go to India. Although negotiator­s were in the final stages, deciding tonnages and tariff rates, Lighthizer spiked the deal. The US state department and lower level USTR officials tried to argue that the mini-deal would help curb the protection­ist interests they feared were taking over Indian trade policy.

Lighthizer held firm: he would hold out for a 21st century deal.signs in India’s budget underminin­g concession­s made earlier on data localisati­on and New Delhi’s blocking US firms like Mastercard and Visa from its Unified Payments Interface only strengthen­ed his view. The USTR also felt he only had bandwidth for one trade deal with India, given pending trade problems with China and a looming European Union battle.

Indian officials say having several months more time to work out the digital trade issues would not be a bad thing.

They also feel that following the Trump summit, Washington might put visa concerns on the table. Walnuts, chicken legs and Harley-davidson motorcycle­s remain close to Trump’s heart. But with the summit done, the view on both sides is that the focus will now be on what really matters.

NEWDELHI: US President Donald Trump assured Indian industry leaders on Tuesday that he would ease regulation­s to attract more investment­s as the two countries work towards a broader trade deal.

Trump, on the last day of a two-day visit, met several Indian industrial­ists, including Reliance Industries Ltd’s Mukesh Ambani, Aditya Birla group’s Kumar Mangalam Birla, Infosys Ltd’s chief executive officer Salil Parekh, Biocon Ltd chairperso­n Kiran Mazumdar Shaw, Larsen & Toubro group chairman A.M. Naik, UPL Ltd’s chief Jai Shroff, Cipla Ltd’s Samina Vaziralli and Mahindra Group chairman Anand Mahindra.

The industrial­ists detailed their businesses and investment­s in the US to Trump, who congratula­ted them for putting their money in the US and creating jobs. He said his administra­tion was ready to help businesses grow and flourish in the US.

“We are going to cut a lot more regulation­s. Some have to

OFFICIALS SAY US TRADE REPRESENTA­TIVE ROBERT LIGHTHIZER FELT THE BATTLES OVER E-COMMERCE, DATA LOCALISATI­ON AND DIGITAL PAYMENTS WERE THE REAL TRADE ISSUES

go through the statutory process,” Trump said.

On his government’s probusines­s approach, the US president said the US stock markets would surge if he is re-elected in November. “If I don’t win, you’re going to see a crash like you’ve never seen before”, he said. Trump said his government planned to announce tax cuts soon for middle-class Americans.

Earlier on Tuesday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the two countries will soon commence negotiatio­ns for a “big” trade deal.

India on Tuesday also agreed to purchase more than $3 billion of advanced US military equipment comprising Apache and MH-60 Romeo helicopter­s.

The two countries have also been in talks on agricultur­al products and medical equipment as well, with the US also pressuring India to change its intellectu­al property laws, especially to allow patents for incrementa­l innovation. These talks have not seemed to fructify and no details have surfaced on them during Trump’s visit.

 ?? PTI ?? US President Donald Trump interacts with Reliance Industries chairman Mukesh Ambani at the US embassy on Tuesday.
PTI US President Donald Trump interacts with Reliance Industries chairman Mukesh Ambani at the US embassy on Tuesday.

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