The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US to end preferenti­al trade status for India and Turkey

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WASHINGTON: At President Donald Trump’s direction, Washington intends to scrap the preferenti­al trade status granted to India and Turkey, the US trade chief’s office said.

The move comes as the US and China seek to negotiate an exit from a costly trade war between the two countries that is part of the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to address what it views as inequitabl­e commercial relationsh­ips with other states.

Washington “intends to terminate India’s and Turkey’s designatio­ns as beneficiar­y developing countries under the Generalize­d System of Preference­s (GSP) programme because they no longer comply with the statutory eligibilit­y criteria,” the Office of the US Trade Representa­tive said in a statement.

India has failed to provide assurances that it would allow required market access, while Turkey is “sufficient­ly economical­ly developed” that it no longer qualifies, it added.

Under the GSP programme, “certain products” can enter the US duty-free if countries meet eligibilit­y criteria including “providing the United States with equitable and reasonable market access.”

India, however, “has implemente­d a wide array of trade barriers that create serious negative effects on United States commerce,” the statement said.

It said Turkey, after being designated a GSP beneficiar­y in 1975, has meanwhile demonstrat­ed a “higher level of economic developmen­t,” meaning that it can be “graduated” from the programme.

The changes cannot take effect for at least 60 days following the notificati­on of Congress as well as the countries affected – a process Trump began Monday with letters to the speaker of the House of Representa­tives and the president of the Senate.

The change for India came after “intensive engagement” between New Delhi and Washington, Trump wrote in one letter, the text of which was released by the White House.

“I will continue to assess whether the government of India is providing equitable and reasonable access to its markets, in accordance with the GSP eligibilit­y criteria,” the president wrote.

In his letter on Turkey, Trump said the country’s economy “has grown and diversifie­d,” and noted that Istanbul has already “graduated from other developed countries’ GSP programmes.”

Trump has made taking aim at what he considers imbalanced trade relationsh­ips a central plank of his presidency – sparking a trade war with Beijing that has dragged on for nearly a year.

The US and China eventually agreed to a 90-day truce to work out their difference­s, and Beijing and Washington have been edging closer to an agreement in recent weeks.

The truce was scheduled to end on Friday, but Trump lifted the ultimatum to further increase tariffs, satisfied by progress made in several rounds of talks.

Under an agreement taking shape, Beijing would lower some barriers on US companies’ operations in China and purchase large amounts American agricultur­al and energy goods if the United States lowered most of the tariffs in return.

However, leading news reports have said significan­t details remained unresolved. — AFP

 ??  ?? An Indian artists dressed as the Hindu deity Mata Kali performs a dance during a religious procession on the occasion of‘Maha Shivaratri’ festival, in Amritsar on March 4. At President Donald Trump’s direction,Washington intends to scrap the preferenti­al trade status granted to India and Turkey, the US trade chief’s office said. — AFP photo
An Indian artists dressed as the Hindu deity Mata Kali performs a dance during a religious procession on the occasion of‘Maha Shivaratri’ festival, in Amritsar on March 4. At President Donald Trump’s direction,Washington intends to scrap the preferenti­al trade status granted to India and Turkey, the US trade chief’s office said. — AFP photo

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