Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

India, Australia set to ink key deal this week

- Rezaul H Laskar and Rajeev Jayaswal letters@hindustant­imes.com

India and Australia are expected to unveil an interim, or early harvest, trade deal in the first week of April as a precursor to a comprehens­ive free trade agreement that is being pushed by the leadership of both countries, people familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.

The fine print of the interim deal is ready for approval by the two government­s, which is expected this week, and the agreement will then be announced immediatel­y, the people cited above said, requesting anonymity. An announceme­nt is expected as early as April 2, they added.

The interim deal will set the stage for a comprehens­ive economic cooperatio­n agreement (CEPA) with Australia, the second such pact with a major country following the successful conclusion of a treaty with the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in February.

Both India and Australia understand each other’s sensitivit­ies, and barring such items, there are immense possibilit­ies to “catch low hanging fruits for mutual gains”, one person said, hinting that the interim deal may not cover the dairy sector.

The early harvest deal will pave way for a comprehens­ive FTA, on the lines of the one with the UAE, in the next 12 months, he said. The interim agreement would cover areas of mutual interest, such as goods, services, rules of

origin, sanitary and phytosanit­ary measures, customs procedures, and legal and institutio­nal issues.

The early trade deal is also expected to cover a wide range of sectors such as mining, pharmaceut­ical, renewable energy, railways, gems and jewellery, tourism, defence, textiles, gaming, agricultur­e, education and tourism.

On February 11, commerce minister Piyush Goyal and his Australian counterpar­t Dan Tehan jointly announced in New Delhi that the two partners had reached “an understand­ing on the interim agreement”, and that it could be finalised in the next 30 days.

Australian high commission­er Barry O’Farrell, too, recently said the two sides were set to finalise the early harvest deal by the end of March.

There were some delays because of technical reasons, including geopolitic­al developmen­ts such as the Ukraine crisis, the people said, adding the IndiaAustr­alia CECA will be concluded 12 months after the interim deal.

Australia and India are important trading partners, with bilateral trade worth about $12.3 billion during 2020-21, which was a Covid year. Trade between the two countries has surged significan­tly in the current fiscal. According to official data for April 2021-January 2022, while India’s exports to Australia increased by 92.6% on an annualised basis at $6.33 billion, imports surged 119.6% to $13.5 billion in the same period.

Major Indian exports to Australia are petroleum products, medicines, polished diamonds, gold jewellery and apparel, while key Australian exports to India include coal, wool, liquefied natural gas (LNG), alumina, pulses, fruits, and non-monetary gold.

In services, major Indian exports relate to travel, telecom and computers, and government and financial services, while Australian services exports are principall­y in education and personalre­lated travel.

In 2020, India was Australia’s seventh-largest trading partner and sixth largest export destinatio­n, driven by coal and internatio­nal education.

Australia’s trade minister Dan Tehan has visited India twice since September last year to push the interim trade deal. Australia also announced investment­s worth ₹1,500 crore (Aus$ 280 million) during a recent virtual summit, covering areas ranging from critical minerals to space cooperatio­n.

 ?? ?? Australian PM Scott Morrison with PM Narendra Modi.
Australian PM Scott Morrison with PM Narendra Modi.

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