Arab News

India, GCC agree to resume talks on free trade accord

Developmen­t comes 14 years after the last round of negotiatio­ns between the two sides

- Sanjay Kumar New Delhi

India and the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council have decided to resume talks on a free trade agreement, India’s trade minister and the GCC secretary-general announced Thursday, 14 years after the last round of negotiatio­ns.

The GCC is a union of six countries in the Gulf region — Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman and Bahrain.

This is the third attempt at a trade pact between the two sides, with two inconclusi­ve rounds held in 2006 and 2008.

The announceme­nt regarding the resumption of talks came after a meeting of the Indian Trade Minister Piyush Goyal with GCC Secretary-General Nayef Falah Al-Hajraf.

“I am sure the engagement with the GCC will be in tune with the truly unique and special relations enjoyed by the countries of the GCC region and India. I am quite confident that the two sides will set new benchmarks together,” Goyal said at a joint press conference with Al-Hajraf.

“We have agreed to pursue an FTA between GCC and India and resume the negotiatio­n and conclude the same at the earliest.”

He said the GCC was already India’s largest trading partner, with the bilateral merchandis­e trade valued at $154 billion and bilateral trade in services at $14 billion in the year 2021-22.

The GCC countries contribute almost 35 percent of India’s oil imports and 70 percent of its gas imports, according to Indian Commerce Ministry data.

India’s overall crude oil imports from the GCC remained about $48 billion, while liquefied natural gas and liquefied petroleum gas imports stood at about $21 billion in 2021-22.

“Over the last two years or so, the world has been hit by the pandemic and the economic outlook looked uncertain and it is the time to capitalize on the already existing strong relations between the GCC and India,” Al-Hajraf said in his opening statement.

He said India and the GCC were making joint efforts in the areas including trade, investment, technology, climate change and food security.

“We very much appreciate the contributi­ons made by the Indian expats living in the GCC countries and contributi­ng to the GCC economy,” the GCC secretaryg­eneral said.

There are an estimated 32 million non-resident Indians across the world, and nearly half of them are estimated to be working in Gulf countries.

India earlier this year signed an FTA with the UAE, which is now the third largest trading partner of the South Asian republic after the US and China.

India received $87 billion in foreign remittance­s in 2021 and a sizable chunk of this amount came from the Gulf region, according to a report published by the World Bank.

“GCC countries are the most important component of India’s Act West policy, and this important economic bloc in the region is the largest trading partner among regional organizati­ons,” Muddassir Quamar of the New Delhi-based Institute of Defense Studies and Analyses think tank told Arab News. “The FTA will further boost bilateral trade and remove any hurdles faced by industries in both India and GCC countries in export-import.” The trade pact “will be the next critical step in our special strategic partnershi­p with GCC countries,” said Anil Trigunayat, India’s former ambassador to Jordan.

“The historic and civilizati­onal connect has been converted into a mutually beneficial strategic opportunit­y, therefore it is natural that the two sides find an institutio­nal mechanism like FTA at the earliest,” Trigunayat told Arab News.

It “will comprehens­ively and futuristic­ally encompass all areas of possible cooperatio­n — trade, technology, services, mobility, investment­s — by addressing genuine concerns of both sides.” Manish Singhal of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry said the “free trade agreement with the GCC has huge economic potential for India.” He added: “If it’s a comprehens­ive FTA, then the investment­s and mutual recognitio­n of standards in the pharmaceut­ical and engineerin­g sectors will see a big boost, especially in terms of our exports.”

I am sure the engagement with the GCC will be in tune with the truly unique and special relations enjoyed by the countries of the GCC region and India. I am quite confident that the two sides will set new benchmarks together. Piyush Goyal

Indian trade minister

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia