Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Trump’s trade attack pushes India to negotiatin­g table

- archana chaudhary, shruti BY srivastava (c) 2019, Bloomberg · Jun 03, 2019 -

India plans to return to the negotiatin­g table after President Donald Trump terminated a trade concession that allowed the country to export almost 2,000 products to the U.S. duty-free, people with knowledge of the matter said.

While an option is to raise tariffs on a slew of U.S. goods as retaliatio­n, India may not choose that considerin­g the benefits withdrawn by Trump were not mandated by any global pact and were offered voluntaril­y by Washington, said the people who asked not to be identified, as they aren’t authorized to speak to the media. Any counter tariff measures could fall foul of World Trade Organizati­on norms.

The matter would be discussed when Piyush Goyal, India’s new trade minister, meets local officials and trade bodies on June 6, the people said. India’s commerce ministry spokeswoma­n Monideepa Mukherjee declined to comment.

India last year announced higher tariffs on a clutch of items in retaliatio­n to U.S. imposing higher levies on some products shipped from the South Asian nation, mirroring steps taken by China and the European Union. New Delhi, however, repeatedly deferred imposition of the new tariffs as it kept the door open for talks to avert a trade war.

Trump’s move ends trade concession to $5.7 billion of goods that India shipped to the U.S. as of 2017. These include imitation jewelry, leather goods, pharmaceut­icals, chemical and plastics and some farm items.

The U.S. has separately called for India to remove what Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross last month described as “unfavourab­le treatment” to U.S. companies and an imbalance in India-u.s. trade.

India’s inability to ratchet up the trade dispute stems from its increasing reliance on the U.S. for defence equipment purchases as part of a strategic partnershi­p. The U.S. has been spearheadi­ng a grouping of nations including India, Australia and Japan as part of its policy to contain China’s growing economic and military might in Asia.

“Given the rising tempo of U.S.India strategic ties on matters chiefly pertaining to defence inter-operabilit­y, India may take a tempered approach,” said Kashish Parpiani, fellow at Observer Research Foundation, a private think-tank. The U.S.’S arms exports to India rose by over 550% in the five years to 2017, making it India’s second-largest arms supplier, Parpiani said.

India, which on its part tried to reduce the $21 billion trade surplus with the U.S. by stepping up imports from America, termed the withdrawal of benefits as “unfortunat­e.” While the country will continue to work on improving ties with the U.S., its trade decisions would be guided by its own “developmen­t imperative­s and concerns,” India’s trade ministry said in a statement last week.(bloomberg)

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