The Borneo Post

India, US closing in on package deal to remove trade irritants

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NEW DELHI: Indian farmers and US manufactur­ers of medical devices could be among the main winners in a trade package under negotiatio­n, as Washington and New Delhi look to remove longstandi­ng irritants to ties, sources familiar with the talks said.

Having skirmished for months over tit-for-tat tariffs on steel and some agricultur­al products, the two sides began talks in June that also cover India’s concerns over US steel tariffs and US problems with Indian tariffs on imported IT equipment.

“We are closely negotiatin­g a discrete package of trade issues.

It will amount to a pretty substantiv­e agreement,” said a source with knowledge of the negotiatio­ns.

Neither the office of the United States Trade Representa­tive or India’s trade ministry responded to a request for comment.

The source said the two sides expected to close the deal in the next few weeks.

US President Donald Trump, who dislikes multilater­al trade agreements, said earlier this month that India had approached the United States to “start doing a trade deal,” without giving any details.

The current discussion­s, however, are focussed on removing outstandin­g sources of friction, and are not aimed at creating a bilateral free trade agreement, sources from both sides said.

Having already waded into bigger fights with China and the European Union, Trump has previously called out India for unfair trade practices.

At an estimated US$ 126 billion, US goods and services trade with India last year was less than a fifth of its trade with China.

Unlike some other countries India failed to be given a waiver after the Trump administra­tion imposed new import tariffs on steel and aluminium imports in March.

New Delhi retaliated by raising tariffs on a number of US products but has held back from implementi­ng them while it negotiates a package to soothe ties. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Labourers load steel rods onto a truck at a steel factory on the outskirts of Jammu. Having skirmished for months over tit-for-tat tariffs on steel and some agricultur­al products, the two sides began talks in June that also cover India’s concerns over US steel tariffs and US problems with Indian tariffs on imported IT equipment. — Reuters photo
Labourers load steel rods onto a truck at a steel factory on the outskirts of Jammu. Having skirmished for months over tit-for-tat tariffs on steel and some agricultur­al products, the two sides began talks in June that also cover India’s concerns over US steel tariffs and US problems with Indian tariffs on imported IT equipment. — Reuters photo

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