The Sunday Guardian

AFTER BAR COUNCIL NOD TO FOREIGN LAWYERS, INDIA-UK CLOSER TO SIGNING FTA

- ABHINANDAN MISHRA

The “surprising” decision of the Bar Council of India (BCI) to allow foreign lawyers and law firms to practice in India was a vital part of the talks regarding the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) between India and the United Kingdom that are in their final stages.

For long, representa­tives from London had been pushing to “liberalize” India’s legal service space by allowing the entry of lawyers and firms that are originally registered outside India. The reason for this is the “huge” market for quality legal minds that India has to offer.

As per a report, the average billing that Indian law firms charge (per hour) from their clients is $271 or Rs 22,000 per hour. The highest is being earned by employees at the managing partner level (up to $2,000 per hour or Rs 1.65 lakh per hour).

In September last year, representa­tives of the Law Society of England and Wales and the UK government’s Department of Internatio­nal Trade had come to Delhi and met Indian representa­tives, including bureaucrat­s, members of BCI and those of Indian law firms, to persuade them to allow foreign law firms to come to India.

The objections to the entry of the law firms into India were mostly coming from the representa­tives of law firms that are based in India. During the discussion­s, the objections on the part of the Indian side, people aware of these developmen­ts said, were two-fold—one that even if a reciprocal arrangemen­t was agreed upon, in which the Indian lawyers and law firms would be able to practice in the UK, the Indian entities would find it extremely difficult to get “clients” in the UK because of the already establishe­d local lawyers and firms.

The second objection was that the Indian entities in India would lose their hold over young lawyers as once the foreign lawyers and firms enter the Indian market, they will emerge as the first choice for internship and jobs considerin­g their pro-employee policies, pay, work environmen­t and profession­alism.

In short, the Indian team, rather than allowing the free market economy to play out by competing in a global market and allowing global competitio­n into India, wanted to continue with “protection­ism”, which was the hallmark of the Indian economy for long.

However, given the enormous mutual benefits that these two countries have once the FTA is signed, Government of India decided to

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