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US
allows duty-free access to 42 Indian products
Our
Economic Bureau
New Delhi, Aug 8: In a major initiative, the United
States has decided to restore the benefit of the US generalised
system of preferences (GSP) for 42 more Indian export items
in the jewellery, carpet and leather sectors. This would result
in a profit of about $540 million for India.
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| Commerce
and industry minister Murasoli Maran with US trade representative
Robert Zoellick at Nirman Bhawan in New Delhi on Wednesday. |
The decision was conveyed by
the visiting US trade representative Robert B Zoellick during
his talks with commerce and industry minister Murasoli Maran
here on Wednesday.
Mr Maran welcomed the move and hoped that this would further
contribute to promotion of closer bilateral trade relations,
an official released said.
“We hope that the additional coverage for jewellery leather
and carpets under the GSP provisions would be able to take
effect by the end of the month,” Mr Zoellick told reporters
after the meeting. No decision, however, to include agro-chemicals
and pharmaceuticals in the enhanced list had been taken yet,
he clarified.
Mr Zoellick, who had an hour-long meeting with Mr Maran, said,
the decision would be notified in the federal register soon
after his return to Washington next week.
He said that the US decision “gives us a tangible aspect of
trying to improve important trading relationship. The US is
already India’s biggest trading partner and would like to
add more to this”. Two-way trade has shot up from $15 billion
at the time of Uruguay Round to $39 billion at present.
The GSP is a trade programme of the US government that grants
duty-free treatment to specified products that are imported
from over 140 developing countries.
The US had been denying GSP for over 100 Indian products,
including agricultural, chemicals and pharmaceuticals. India,
on the other hand, had been pressing for restoration of these
benefits.
Washington’s move implies that it is willing to address New
Delhi’s concern on trade-related issues such as the GSP.
Yet another major initiative announced by Mr Zoellick related
to operationalising the Indo-US trade policy dialogue at the
ministerial-level and to work out the details about its framework
by officials of the two governments.
He said the two sides talked about trade relations — both
bilaterally and globally and in the context of the WTO. In
the context of the fourth WTO ministerial conference in Doha,
Mr Maran reiterated that India viewed implementation issues
as a matter of great priority and emphasised that the issues
arising from implementation of Uruguay Round agreements raised
by developing countries needed to be urgently addressed.
He drew attention to the fact that while the WTO General Council
in May last year had taken a decision to resolve these issues
before the next ministerial meeting, very little progress
had been achieved so far.
He called for greater political will to be shown by developed
countries and said that the early resolution of these concerns
would contribute substantially towards restoring confidence
of the developing countries in WTO.
Mr Zoellick said during the meeting, New Delhi underscored
the importance of implementation agenda. “We talked about
that as well as the prospects for Doha,” he added.
Appreciating India’s stand, he felt that New Delhi would have
to take its own decisions regarding Doha, adding the purpose
of his visit was “more to listen and to learn and to be able
to understand some of India’s concerns, so that we can bring
India and the other 141 countries on board. This visit is
a step in that process”.
The US trade representative said, “India has much more that
it can offer the world as the world’s largest democracy. The
economic reforms process is producing benefits and part of
that will be India’s engagement in the international trading
system including the WTO process.”
He said the subject of anti-dumping duty on cut-to-length
Indian carbon steel plates did not figure during the talks.
India would play a contributory role in the WTO by voicing
the concern of developing countries, he stated.
Mr Zoellick would hold discussions with finance minister Yashwant
Sinha and external affairs minister Jaswant Singh on Thursday.
He would also meet Congress president and leader of the Opposition
in the Lok Sabha Sonia Gandhi.
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