Global Times

Indian firms increase CIIE presence

Indian firms increase CIIE presence Companies aim for exports despite withdrawal from RCEP

- By Wang Jiamei in Shanghai and Wang Yi in Beijing

Indian businesses are increasing their presence at the second China Internatio­nal Import Expo (CIIE), in the hope of finding opportunit­ies emerging with China’s rising consumptio­n, while the country surprising­ly pulled out from a free trade deal called the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP).

Business representa­tives and officials from India, which joins the list of guest countries of honor at the CIIE this year, are seriously promoting their exports at the expo, especially for medical products, informatio­n technology (IT) and the agricultur­e sector.

“We are expecting good trade with China, more chances of exporting to China. That’s why we are participat­ing in the [CIIE] for the second time,” M. Shaji, deputy director of the Marine Products Export Developmen­t Authority under India’s Ministry of Commerce and Industry, told the Global Times.

China has rising demand and may import more seafood from India, especially shrimp, he said.

“The Chinese market has big potential. In

2017, our chemical exports to China increased by 144 percent; last year it was 89 percent,” Ajay Kadakia, chairman of the Indian Basic Chemicals, Cosmetics and Dyes Export Promotion Council, told the Global Times.

The number of Indian companies attending the second CIIE is about 100, India’s Consul General in Shanghai Anil Rai said, according to Indian news agency PTI.

“We have no business in China, but we are looking for some partners in China that can represent us, hopefully at this expo,” Sudhir Chitragar, owner of The Millet Co, a food company, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

K. Jagannatha­n, deputy director of the Spices Board under the Indian Ministry of Commerce and Industry, who is attending the expo for the first time, told the Global Times that, “We are expecting more orders, that’s why we are here.”

The attitude of the Indian business community toward free trade shows that free trade pacts like the RCEP are favorable to India in the long run for their trade balance and industry developmen­t, according to experts.

India’s withdrawal from the RCEP, the would-be largest free trade pact in the world, will have different influences on different industries in the short term, but in the long run, it’s not conducive for the country to achieve trade balance and develop its industries, said Liu Xiaoxue, an associate research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences’ National Institute of Internatio­nal Strategy.

“[The decision against joining] the RCEP hurts our chemical industry,” Kadakia said, noting that “RCEP is a must for the chemical industry.”

“For the Indian chemical industry, its major market is in the Associatio­n of South(ASEAN), east Asian Nations (ASEAN), and India’s withdrawal from the RCEP will make its products lose their edge in price,” Liu said.

The large trade deficit is a structural problem. India can’t just expect China to solve the problem, Liu added.

The bilateral trade volume between Chi95.54 na and India was $95.54 billion in 2018, up 13.2 percent year-on -year, data from China’s Ministry of Commerce showed.

China has been India’s largest trade partner for a long time and India is China’s largest trade partner in South Asia. The trade volume between the two countries already approached $100 billion in the first

ten months of this year, said Sun Weidong, Chinese Ambassador to India, in an interview with the Xinhua News Agency in October.

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 ?? Photo: Yang Hui/GT ?? A view of India’s national pavilion on Tuesday during the second China Internatio­nal Import Expo
Photo: Yang Hui/GT A view of India’s national pavilion on Tuesday during the second China Internatio­nal Import Expo

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