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Last December, Commerce and Industries Minister Kamal
Nath said that the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) will be wrapped in a matter of
months - and concluded before the next annual meeting. But there
still appears to be a spanner in the works. The deadline is being
extended by three or six months every time, but the impression that
is sought to be created is that ‘We are almost there’ - so near and
yet so far.
No breakthroughs
Though the Union Government has been pushing for an
FTA with many countries on a bilateral basis, and also with regional
blocks like ASEAN and the EU, there have been no major
breakthroughs. Even existing bilateral FTAs with countries such as
Sri Lanka
frequently run into problems, with domestic trade and industry
complaining about losing their market or competitive edge.
While the Centre takes a political initiative with
regard to Least Developed Countries such as
Nepal and Bhutan,
or strategically important countries such as
Sri Lanka
and Singapore, it does not push the other FTAs beyond a point.
Industry representatives also get involved in working out the nuts
and bolts of these agreements. “It is not always possible to keep
the balance of trade as the primary criterion for finalising such
agreements. The government looks at FTAs and regional trade blocs as
building blocks and incremental growth towards global trade and a
global free trade area. It is part of the preparation of domestic
trade and industry for that objective,” explains a senior official
in the Commerce Ministry. He says that the Ministry of External
Affairs, industry bodies, and the Indian missions in those countries
also get involved in the discussions and the details, with the
objective of protecting national interests.
Specifically on the Indo-ASEAN FTA, an industry source
associated with the discussions say: “We are not getting anything in
return for the concessions that we are prepared to offer. As a
group, we find
Singapore and
Malaysia as the main markets, with Vietnam to some extent. Trade
with Myanmar is mostly through Singapore. Indonesia has major
problems and does not want to compromise. Thailand appears to be a
closed market, and we have not accessed the Philippines at all. Palm
oil remains the major stumbling block. But the basic question is
what can we export to those countries?”
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and the ASEAN leaders
want the FTA to be clinched ahead of the next summit. But industry
and officials have to sort out these problems and strike a
compromise before any agreement can be inked.
Major initiative
Similarly, a major initiative has been launched with
the 27-member European Union for an FTA.
India has presented
a document related with the negotiations that have begun. According
to Peter Power, spokesperson for the EU Trade Commissioner, there is
no time frame for the talks. “I can confirm we have received a
document from India. I can confirm that it is certainly a useful and
worthwhile opening bid for negotiations that will have to go further
and deeper. A lot of work remains to be done to have an agreement
that would be worth of support by both sides. We should hope to see
substantial movement in the next year to 18 months.” .
Similarly,
India seeks to
evolve an FTA with the African bloc, the Latin American countries,
and the North American trade block. All these are outside the main
WTO negotiations that keep breaking down frequently after the
Doha round.
Ref link:
http://www.bilaterals.org/article.php3?id_article=12298 |