Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

‘TRADE DEFICIT WITH CHINA A BIG CONCERN’

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

India on Monday said it has reservatio­ns on joining the proposed Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p with the ASEAN countries and its six FTA partners, due to such concerns.

SINGAPORE: India on Monday said it has reservatio­ns on joining the proposed Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p with the ASEAN countries and its six FTA partners, due to concerns, including the “enormous” trade deficit with China, which has ballooned to over USD 57 billion.

The Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP) agreement is being negotiated among 10 ASEAN members (Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippine­s, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam) and their six trade partners -- Australia, China, India, Japan, Korea and New Zealand to create a free trade pact covering a third of the world’s economy.

External affairs minister S Jaishankar, speaking during a panel discussion at the inaugural session of India-singapore Busiindia ness & Innovation Summit here, said India remained concerned over the unfair” market access to Indian products and the “protection­ist policies” of Beijing that have created a significan­t trade deficit between the two nations. The trade deficit with India in 2018, according to official Chinese data, climbed to USD 57.86 billion from USD 51.72 billion in 2017 in about USD 95.54 total bilateral trade.

The Indian industry has raised concerns over the presence of China in the grouping with which has a huge trade. Various sectors, including dairy, metals, electronic­s, chemicals, and textiles, have urged the government to not agree on duty cut in these segments.

“The big concerns of India are of course, one, its relationsh­ip with China because we have an enormous trade deficit with China,” Jaishankar said in response to a question on the ongoing RCEP negotiatio­ns.

At the session, also attended by his Singaporea­n counterpar­t Vivian Balakrishn­an, Jaishankar said India fears that the RECP deal, which would call for a lowering of tariffs, would lead to a flood of goods from China while not assuring India of an equal access to the Chinese markets, thereby widening its large trade deficit.

On Sunday, the 16 RCEP participat­ing nations that are negotiatin­g a mega free trade agreement have agreed to work together to iron out outstandin­g issues which are fundamenta­l to conclude the talks this year, a joint statement said.

The statement was issued after the 7th RCEP ministeria­l meeting in Bangkok. Negotiator­s have expressed hope that the RCEP would be delivered by the end of the year. India has registered trade deficit in 2018-19 with as many as 11 RCEP countries, including China, South Korea and Australia.

Jaishankar also raised concerns that India’s forte, its trade in services, was less well enforced through regulation­s than the trade in goods. The deal had the geo-strategic objective of holding the line against protection­ist and unilateral policies, he agreed. Even so, it had to make economic sense, he said. “RCEP, at the end of the day, is an economic negotiatio­n. It has a strategic implicatio­n but the merits... have to be economic,” he said.

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S Jaishankar

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