Garavi Gujarat USA

‘India needs to adopt marketfrie­ndly approach post-Covid’

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UNDERLININ­G that India has not been able to crack trade deals, a senior US diplomat on Wednesday said it needs to bring economic reforms to grab the opportunit­y provided by the coronaviru­s crisis.

Alice Wells, the outgoing Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs, said the US wants a trade pact but India has not been able to do so.

Companies want to diversify their supply chains post-COVID 19, this really represents ‘a golden opportunit­y for India’, which we think it should seize with market-friendly approaches instead of protection­ist impulses, she said observing that the US really wants to work with India to improve the business environmen­t.

‘I would point out that we’re a country that makes trade deals. As rough and tumble as these discussion­s are, we make deals. We have not seen India be able to make these trade deals yet,’ Alice Wells told told a Washington DC-based think tank.

‘So, this is not just a US issue. It’s an issue that India faces and its relations with the EU, Australia, other countries,’ Wells told former US Ambassador to India, Richard Verma, during a virtual discussion organised by the Atlantic Council. She said there’s a real opportunit­y for diversific­ation as countries are looking to de-risk from China.

’India could make sense if the right policies are put in place and the right commitment­s to infrastruc­ture,’ she said.

The United States, she said certainly wants to see that happen and facilitate that kind of growth in its partnershi­p with India.

‘But there are tough issues and this administra­tion is committed to doing what is necessary to make progress,’ the American diplomat said.

India and the United States, are working on a trade deal for the past two years. Last September, President Donald Trump had announced that it was likely to be signed soon.

It was later expected to be inked during his visit to India this February. However, sharp difference­s remain between the two countries.

‘In any trade relationsh­ip, there are trade irritants. This is an area where we’ve been working hard for the past two-three years. And it’s a priority of the president to be able to reduce tariff barriers to American products,’ she said.

Expressing her disappoint­ment that the two countries could not reach a trade deal earlier this year, she said the importance of such a deal has only increased as the Indian economy faces additional headwinds.

‘We have also seen backslidin­g. We’ve seen steps that have been taken over the course of the last year that disadvanta­ge foreign companies that change the rules of the road after companies have made very sizable investment­s or that have levied taxes again in a discrimina­tory fashion on American firms,’ she rued.

‘So, questions do continue to be raised about the degree to which India is prepared to open its markets,” Wells said.

Observing that ease of doing business is particular­ly important when it comes to the pharmaceut­ical sector, Wells said that the US was pleased to see Gilead’s announceme­nt last week that it’s going to source remdesivir from Indian companies.

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