Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

First consignmen­t to UAE under CEPA sent, with zero duty

- Dilasha Seth dilasha.seth@livemint.com

BENGALURU: India on Sunday sent the first consignmen­t of jewellery to the UAE under the bilateral comprehens­ive free trade agreement (FTA) that came into force on 1 May. The consignmen­t flagged off by commerce secretary BVR Subrahmany­am from New Delhi will now benefit from zero duty access to the UAE market.

The Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p Agreement (CEPA) will initially give zero duty access to 90% of Indian products and 65% of products from UAE. Over 10 years, 97% of Indian products will get zeroduty access to the UAE market and 90% of UAE products would have duty free access to the Indian market.

India has extended a 1% duty concession for gold imports from the UAE for up to 200 tonnes of inbound shipments under the comprehens­ive free trade pact signed on February 18.

“The gems and jewellery sector contribute­s a substantia­l portion of India’s exports to the UAE and is a sector that is expected to benefit significan­tly from the tariff concession­s obtained for Indian products under the IndiaUAE CEPA,” the ministry of commerce said on Sunday.

Other items that will benefit from preferenti­al market access to the UAE include textiles, leather, footwear, sports goods, plastics, furniture, agricultur­al and wood products, engineerin­g products, pharmaceut­icals, medical devices, and automobile­s. In case of services, Indian service providers will have enhanced access to around 111 sub-sectors from the 11 broad service sectors under the pact.

Subrahmany­am urged exporters to take advantage of free trade agreements and said that the UAE would be a gateway to the world for Indian exports. The government is working on reducing the logistics cost so that products from India’s hinterland could compete in the global market, he said.

CEPA, which was negotiated in a record 88 days, is expected to increase the total value of bilateral trade in goods to more than $100 billion and trade in services to more than $ 15 billion within five years.

“Given the size of India’s market and the access that UAE would give to India, much more could be achieved,” Subrahmany­am said.

India last month signed an interim trade agreement with Australia and is in negotiatio­ns with the UK, Canada, and the EU for similar agreements.

The Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs and the Directorat­e General of Foreign Trade on Sunday issued notificati­ons for the operationa­lisation of the agreement.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? The CEPA will initially give zero duty access to 90% of Indian products.
BLOOMBERG The CEPA will initially give zero duty access to 90% of Indian products.

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