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India-UK FTA talks make progress on rules and investment treaty

12 rounds of talks are completed so far and the 13th round will start from Monday (18)

India-UK FTA talks make progress on rules and investment treaty

THE talks on the proposed free trade agreement between India and the UK are moving and there is 'good progress' on issues such as rules of origin and bilateral investment treaty (BIT), a senior official has said.

These were few of the issues where there were differences between the two sides.


“Many things are moving very fast. Like rules of origin and bilateral investment treaty, there is a good progress. Negotiations are happening… Towards the end of the deal, it is the difficult issues which are to be closed and therefore it requires more time and more deliberations," said commerce secretary Sunil Barthwal,

He said that mobility is also one of the subjects which is being negotiated.

The ‘rules of origin’ provision prescribe that minimal processing should happen in the FTA country so that the final manufactured product may be referred as goods originating in that country.

Under this provision, a country that has inked an FTA with India cannot dump goods from some third country in the Indian market by just putting a label on it.

It has to undertake a prescribed value addition in that product to export to India. Rules of origin norms help contain dumping of goods.

Investment treaty is being negotiated as a separate agreement between India and the UK.

These investment treaties help in promoting and protecting investments in each other’s country. The main point of contention involved in this pact is about the mechanism for the settlement of disputes.

On the India-EU trade pact, the ministry said that so far five round of talks are concluded and the sixth round will take place during October 16 -20 in Brussels.

The two regions are also discussing EU’s carbon tax issue in the Trade and Technology Council (TTC).

On the progress of talks on India-Australia Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA), an official said that “significant" progress is there on issues like government procurement, rules of origin, sports, innovation, labour, environment, and traditional knowledge.

The official said that the sixth round of talks are expected to conclude soon and the next round will start from next month.

(PTI)

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  • Inheritance tax concerns, not income tax, drove the decision of the "King of Steel" to leave after 30 years in Britain.
  • The departure marks another high-profile exit as chancellor Rachel Reeves prepares major tax rises in the coming Budget.
Lakshmi Mittal, one of Britain's wealthiest men, has ended his three-decade association with the UK, relocating his tax residence to Switzerland and planning to base himself in Dubai. The 74-year-old steel magnate, worth approximately £15.5 bn according to the Asian Rich List 2025, is the latest prominent entrepreneur to leave Britain amid Labour's tax reforms targeting the super-rich.

The Indian-born billionaire built his fortune through ArcelorMittal, the world's second-largest steelmaker, in which he and his family hold nearly 40 per cent ownership. Since arriving in London in 1995, Mittal became a prominent figure in British business, acquiring expensive properties including a £57 m mansion on Kensington Palace Gardens known as the "Taj Mittal."

An adviser familiar with Mittal's family plans told The Sunday Times that, inheritance tax was the decisive factor in the decision. "It wasn't the tax on income or capital gains that was the issue, the issue was inheritance tax."

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