The Financial Express (Delhi Edition)

Reviving EU-India FTA

A practical solution is to find a midway wherein both partners can relent on certain issues

- GEETHANJAL­I NATARAJ

The EU-India FTA (free trade agreement) negotiatio­ns have been ongoing for more than nine years. The two-way trade in goods stood at $98.5 billion in 2014-15, and India received $24.91 billion in FDI equity inflows from the European Union (EU) between April 2012 and May 2015. The EU has been India’s largest trading partner and the twoway trade is likely to swell significan­tly if the parties could firm up the longpendin­g FTA, officially called the Broad-based Bilateral Trade and Investment Agreement (BTIA).

Negotiatio­ns for an ambitious and broad-based FTA were launched in June 2007; after 12 formal rounds and several technical meetings and discussion­s, these were brought to a de facto standstill in the summer of 2013 due to a mismatch of the level of ambitions and expectatio­ns. Negotiatio­ns focused on market access for goods (to improve coverage of offers on both sides), services, a meaningful chapter on government procuremen­t and sustainabl­e developmen­t. Discussion­s have resumed since January 2016, with the purpose of assessing whether sufficient progress can be made in key outstandin­g issues before formally resuming negotiatio­ns.

At the EU-India Summit of March 30, President Jean-Claude Juncker of the European Commission took a clear stance in favour of tangible progress in the negotiatio­ns, provided there is movement on outstandin­g issues. In recent past, the EU considered the need to build strategic relationsh­ip with emerging economies in trade and investment under its vision “A strategy for smart, sustainabl­e and inclusive growth—Europe 2020.” India has a lot to gain from an FTA with the EU, particular­ly in regard to preferenti­al and duty-free access to the European market. However, it is evident that the negotiatio­ns have been tedious and the path to finalising the FTA is fraught with difficulti­es, given India’s high trade-related regulatory barriers and partial access to a few services sectors like profession­al services, financial services and government procuremen­t.

There are key contentiou­s issues. India wants the EU to give it greater market access in the services (especially Mode 4) and pharmaceut­icals sectors, provide data secure nation status (beneficial to India’s IT sector) and liberalise visa norms for Indian profession­als. On the other hand, the EU wants India to overhaul its financial sector, cut taxes on wines and spirits, reduce tariff on the dairy sector and create a stronger intellectu­al property regime and reduce duties on automobile­s. With regard to the financial sector, the EU has requested for various regulation­s pertaining to bank branches, numerical quotas, foreign ownership, equity ceilings, voting rights and investment­s by stateowned companies in foreign banks in India removed, among other changes. Whether India can summon the political will to satisfy European demands is difficult to determine.

The negotiatio­ns have reached a roadblock on the question of whether the EU will liberalise its visa regime for Indian profession­als. India’s demographi­c advantages have provided it with a skilled, competitiv­e, Englishspe­aking workforce, of which Europe will be lacking in the near future. Considerin­g this, India places considerab­le importance to Mode 4 liberalisa­tion. Mode 4 refers to the delivery of a service within the territory of a member with the service provider being present as a natural person. In essence, this enables free movement of individual profession­als by committing to measures such as relaxation of immigratio­n norms. Europeans, however, have been unable to take on a consolidat­ed position on the matter, which is subject to individual immigratio­n policies of member states rather than of the EU as a whole. It is highly unlikely this issue will be resolved soon unless both sides reach an amicable compromise.

High customs duties on European products such as automobile­s and alcohol remain key issues. The Indian automobile industry is apprehensi­ve about its level of competitiv­eness due to high costs of inputs, the rupee’s depreciati­on and the cascading effects of various taxes, apart from the economies of scale the EU auto industry enjoys. The IPR provisions in India-EU draft FTA also raise concerns as they will limit the capacities of both India and the EU to use public health safeguards and flexibilit­ies allowed in WTO’s TRIPS Agreement. In addition, negotiatio­ns are stuck on the issue of Indian policy on government procuremen­t. India considers government procuremen­t a sensitive issue from a developmen­t perspectiv­e and is reluctant to make changes in its policy.

The importance of signing the India-EU FTA is immense. Against the backdrop of the changing global trade architectu­re, with world trade shifting towards mega trade pacts such as the TPP and TTIP, away from the MFN route, it is imperative for India to sign the FTA with the EU at the earliest. However, India has been going slow on RTAs and FTAs, as the earlier trade deals that India signed with Japan and Korea have not yielded expected results and, in fact, there has been a decrease in trade with these countries after the signing of agreements. India is seriously analysing its FTA policy, though it is fully aware of the consequenc­es of being isolated on the global trade front if it does not act swiftly in concluding some of the FTAs pending for long.

Unfortunat­ely, despite talks of a potential revival of the stalled EU-India FTA, the chances of it getting signed remain grim. Blockages in India’s tariff and non-tariff barriers policy and EU’s reluctance to open doors to Indian profession­als in the IT sector will be hard to overcome. This FTA needs political will from both sides.

A practical solution is to find a midway wherein both the partners can relent on certain issues. For instance, India need not worry about giving access to the European automobile industry, as the Indian automobile sector is hugely competitiv­e and has sufficient demand from within the country. Similarly, the Indian dairy sector should be able to cope with reduction of tariffs on dairy imports from the EU. For the FTA to become a reality by the end of the year, India has to adopt a flexibilit­y approach and iron out difference­s on crucial issues. The author is visiting fellow, Bruegel and Observer Research Foundation. Views are personal

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