The Free Press Journal

RCEP: India needs time to compete

- The writer is a freelance journalist. Views are personal.

TANJAN ROY his is the season for withdrawal­s. President Trump has formally begun the proceeding­s for USA to withdraw from the global climate pact – the Paris Agreement.

India has withdrawn from the Regional Economic Co-operation Agreement (RCEP), a club of sixteen countries including the ASEAN members, plus China, Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand and India. In terms of market power, it would have been the largest, having within its fold some of the biggest economies.

India’s withdrawal was announced succinctly by the prime minister when he stated that when pitched against the interest of “all Indians” the agreement does not give a “positive answer”. That is, he was articulati­ng the fear that signing the agreement would have opened the floodgates of imports competing with those made within the country by ordinary Indians.

Who are these ordinary Indians? They could be the dairy farmers, producing milk, butter and other derivative­s pitted against the cheaper butter from New Zealand or meat from that country. It could have brought in cheaper apples from China or Japan and hurt the apple growers of Kashmir and Himachal Pradesh.

The fundamenta­l problem with the RCEP agreement as it has been worked out, is that it does not accommodat­e some of India’s fears and therefore redressal measures suggested by India. One major redressal measure suggested was the automatic trigger of tariffs in case of unusual surge in imports of some items. The second fundamenta­l issue which would have prompted India’s withdrawal was apparent rejection of its demand for a more free regime for services trade. This included the demand for easier movement of profession­al and service providers – which has been described as “movement of natural persons”. India has some perceived edge in services exports and in its own interest, India would ask for better ground rules for unrestrict­ed services trade.

The third overwhelmi­ng factor seems to be the use of non-tariff barriers. Use of non-tariff barriers is not unknown and all players make use of it, particular­ly as already under the WTO regime tariffs have been progressiv­ely lowered and all that is left to shut out inconvenie­nt imports was to put in place difficult to track non-tariff barriers.

These have been used most deftly in the past, and continues to be used as well, by the developed countries. Take for instance, US imposition of a New York Harbour Maintenanc­e Cess on all imports entering the country through the New York Harbour. Europe has its own package of such measures which create considerab­le hardships for the exporters, including requiring of packaging, containers, disposals of packaging materials used and so on and so forth. France, for example, heavily subsidises farm products, which drive imports uncompetit­ive, on the ground that these are given to maintain the French countrysid­e.

However, no country can better China on this game. China has widely practised nominated ports for nominated products, under which for example, electric fans could be imported only through some remote port and if any consignmen­t reaches some other port it has to go back. China also requires very quaint and difficult to follow labelling on the products in Chinese characters. These are only some of the most obvious ones, the more ingenuous Chinese NTBs are bizarre.

In case of Japan, it is difficult to even comprehend these. Medicine exporters to Japan bite their fingers in desperatio­n. No medical experts and doctors can attend a patient in Japan unless he has an advanced language degree in Japanese. Once again, intricate labelling requiremen­ts on medicines, chemicals, pharmaceut­icals make potential exporters run away.

It would have been an uphill task for the trade negotiator­s to get these things straighten­ed. They would have found it impossible and left them in crooked shapes. In the end, not having got the reassuring changes, India has found it best to beat a retreat.

But then, trade records also do not give enough confidence. Figures indicate that India is running large deficits in their trade with most of the RCEP countries currently. A further freer trade with the same bunch of countries, in which tariffs would have come down hurtling, could have resulted in a balance of payments crisis in no time.

Ever since we started trade with China joining in WTO, India is running a huge trade deficit. Excepting some iron ore and other raw materials to that country, our trade with China has increasing­ly meant that almost all electrical goods are being imported from China and sold by Indian companies under their own brandname.

Look for an electric kettle, a fan, an iron to even Diwali lights and images of resin gods and goddesses – all are coming from China. The official trade is only a part of the overall flow of goods from that country. Periodical­ly, some article or other faces such a surge in imports that a few Indian units are forced to bring down shutters. At one point, Indian dry cell battery makers had to shut down as Chinese imports flooded the Indian market. RCEP has been lukewarm in addressing India’s concerns about sudden surges and automatic tariffs. No wonder that the PM thought it prudent to not sign on the dotted line.

The fact of the matter is that we have miserably failed in manufactur­ing. Our costs still remain high. Doing business in India, despite all the so-called improvemen­ts, continues to be a formidable challenge.

It will still be a better strategy to rather remain a little disengaged from the world and build up own strengths before getting into free trade arrangemen­ts. China was a closed economy when it quit its basic muscle before bursting on the world scene.

In the current state of the economy, when the domestic demand is running low, opening up market to easier imports would be tantamount to handling over the country’s vestigial demand to outside producers. It is better to be circumspec­t in difficult situations.

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