No inherent objection to free trade agreement with India:
US
US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross today said
there has been no serious discussions on India-US free trade agreement
though the Trump administration has no inherent objection over the pact.
US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross today said there has been no
serious discussions on India-US free trade agreement though the Trump
administration has no inherent objection over the pact.
The US
does not have a free trade agreement (FTA) with India and as a result
India-US trade relationship is currently governed under the World Trade
Organization (WTO), Ross told reporters at a White House news
conference.
"The US does not have a free trade agreement with
India at this point. So the trade relations between US and India are
governed by the WTO rules. There's nothing in the actions we've taken,"
Ross said.
However, he said there has been no serious discussion on this with India.
"I
don't believe that there have been any serious discussions with India
of late on the topic of a free trade agreement. But there's no inherent
negative attitude on our part on that," Ross said when asked if he
favoured a free trade agreement with India.
Currently the US has
free trade agreements with 20 countries – Australia, Bahrain, Canada,
Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala,
Honduras, Israel, Jordan, South Korea, Mexico, Moroccan, Nicaragua,
Oman, Panama, Peru and Singapore.
While there is no such move in
this regard right now, the previous American administrations have been
open to the idea of a India-US FTA.
"I think that (FTA) is
something that in the future we see as a very important and positive
development. There are certainly concerns between the US and India in
terms of some of the protective tariffs and trade barriers that we think
that India needs to address," the then Assistant Secretary of State for
South and Central Asia Nisha Desai Biswal had told Senator John McCain
during a Congressional hearing in September of 2013.
US-India
bilateral trade relationship is far away from FTA. In the previous Obama
administration, the two countries talked about a bilateral investment
treaty.
In a recent document, US-India Business Council said it
encourages the US and India to negotiate a bilateral investment treaty
(BIT) that promotes the free flow of economic resources – capital,
people, and technology.
"This is a critical step to unleash the
full potential of industry in both countries. The process of treaty negotiation would provide a platform to resolve deadlocks and challenges
on issues such as tantalisation, the high-skilled work visa program,
intellectual property protection and product conformity by aggregating
the benefits and mitigating costs," it said.
"There is an opportunity
for both countries to also sync their regulatory and standards system
to increase trade and investment. The more convergence there is on
standards, the more jobs and prosperity will likely be created in both
nations. This is a critical foundation for more collaboration in
technology," USIBC
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