Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

US, India Seek To Boost Trade Ties In Energy, Defence

THE US and India plan to boost bilateral trade in energy, aerospace, defence, pharmaceuticals and healthcare as part of a continuing commercial dialogue, officials from both governments said today (14).

They have set up seven working groups of chief executives with top US and Indian firms that will focus on financial trade and investments as well as bring together small and medium enterprises (SME) from the two countries.


"The working groups have been formed among the CEOs. They will be providing recommendations to the government," Kenneth Juster, US Ambassador to India, told reporters at a briefing on the sidelines of the talks.

India and the US have developed close political and security ties. But bilateral trade, which stood at $126 billion in 2017, is widely seen to be performing at nearly a quarter of its potential.

"We resolved to facilitate two-way trade and investment to build on such growth," Indian Trade Minister Suresh Prabhu said in a tweet.

Executives participating in the discussions included Tata chairman N Chandrasekaran and American Tower CEO James Taiclet, an Indian government statement said.

US and Indian officials pressed on with talks on Thursday to resolve differences over trade and investment, Indian government sources said, after US commerce secretary Wilbur Ross called off his visit because of bad weather at home.

Ross addressed the forum in Delhi through teleconference after his flight was cancelled, a government statement said.

Chief executives of top US and Indian firms raised the issue of data localisation, Juster said, but it was not directly addressed by Indian and US government officials, rather left to private discussions being held separately.

Last year India announced proposals to force foreign companies to store more of their user data locally so as to make it accessible to any legal investigations.

US lobby groups voiced doubts, saying this made it difficult for firms to do business in India.

The two governments were also discussing US tariffs imposed blast year on steel and aluminium imports, he said.

India and the US are at odds over a range of trade issues, from India's new rules on e-commerce that affect firms such as Amazon and Walmart to Indian data localisation and tariffs that US president Donald Trump says are exceptionally high.

Washington has also had a longstanding grievance with India over its large trade deficit with the US  and what it sees as the Indian government's lax intellectual property enforcement.

New Delhi defends the measures on e-commerce as a way to protect the interests of small businesses and says it has been cutting tariffs gradually to give local industry a level playing field and create jobs for a very large youth population.

The meeting coincides with a USTR review of India's eligibility as a beneficiary of its Generalised System of Preferences (GSP), under which the country has enjoyed zero tariffs for about 2,000 goods worth $5.6bn exported to the US.

The USTR was considering withdrawal or scaling back of these tariffs because of the lack of reciprocity from India on its tariffs, its tightening curbs on online sales and its insistence that foreign payment card companies, such as Mastercard and Visa, store data in India.

(Reuters)

Add EasternEye As Your Trusted Source
preferred source on google news

More For You

World Cup

Businesses are hiring ahead of the World Cup, hoping for a surge in customers

iStock

US adds 172,000 jobs as World Cup preparations gather pace

  • The US economy added 172,000 jobs in May, beating forecasts.
  • Leisure and hospitality accounted for 70,000 new positions.
  • Questions remain over whether the World Cup will translate into stronger consumer spending.

The US jobs market received an unexpected lift in May as businesses hired thousands of extra workers ahead of the FIFA World Cup, helping the economy comfortably outperform forecasts despite rising costs linked to the ongoing energy shock.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), the US economy created 172,000 jobs during the month, significantly above economists' expectations of 105,000. The unemployment rate remained unchanged at 4.3 per cent.

Keep ReadingShow less