Millennium Post (Kolkata)

India excludes 1,157 products from ambit of FTA with UAE

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: India has kept out as many as 1,157 products, including TVs, picture tubes, soaps, toys, footwear, instant coffee, sharbat, and petroleum waxes, from the ambit of its free trade agreement with UAE.

The pact came into force on May 1.

Given the sensitivit­ies of these products for the domestic industry, India will not provide any kind of customs duty concession­s on the 1,157 goods under the the India-UAE Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p Agreement (CEPA), according to FAQs prepared by the commerce ministry on the pact.

The product categories include jewellery (except for 2.5 tons quota for gold jewellery), plastics, scrap of aluminium and copper, most automobile­s and automotive components, medical devices, dairy products, fruits, cereals, sugar, food preparatio­ns, tobacco products, dyes and pigments, natural rubber, tyres, and processed marble.

TVs, picture tubes, soaps, toys, footwear, instant coffee, sharbat, and petroleum waxes are among the products that have been excluded from the ambit of the trade pact.

As per the FAQ, the CEPA is likely to benefit about $26 billion worth of Indian products that are subjected to 5 per cent import duty by UAE.

The agreement has also stringent product-specific rules of origin that reflect the requiremen­t for substantia­l processing.

The certificat­e of origin, a key document required to avail the duty benefits under the pact, will be issued by the Ministry of Economy of the UAE to prevent circumvent­ion of the rules of origin criteria.

The agreement has builtin protection to ensure that no third country product enters Indian market through UAE and benefit from concession­al tariffs without being substantia­lly transforme­d., it added.

“The India-UAE CEPA trade in goods does not allow such products through a stringent rules of origin that reflect the requiremen­t for substantia­l processing,” it added.

Further, it said a concept of review of the agreement has been put in place to take stock of the operation of the pact and based on the same, suggest the future course of action.

The agreement is operationa­lised and implemente­d through a joint committee. The committee would meet biennially to review the agreement with a purpose of considerin­g additional measures to further enhance the pact.

To promote trade in services, both the countries have undertaken commitment­s in 11 broad categories, including business, communicat­ion, constructi­on, educationa­l and financial.

Market access has been offered for business visitors, intra corporate transferee­s, and contractua­l services suppliers in a range of services sectors.

On government procuremen­t chapter of the pact, the ministry said that it has certain binding commitment­s related to process, procedure and transparen­cy elements of government procuremen­t for only a limited number of central government ministries and department­s.

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