Bend, but not backwards

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| It is equally important to keep in mind the fact that India has already displayed quite a lot of flexibility. Prime Minister Vajpayee's original framework agreement with Asean in 2003 talked of progress in areas like services (where India has a lot to gain), but no negotiations have even begun here. In December 2005, India agreed to follow a 6-digit classification on the Rules of Origin instead of a 4-digit one "" this opened up the possibility of more Asean exports to India, based on imports from non-Asean countries. The value addition norms were also reduced from 40 per cent to 35 per cent; the negative list has been brought down from 1,414 items in December 2005 to 489 now and comprises one area where more action is possible without delay. |
| India's negotiators would do well to remind their interlocutors of this record. They should also keep in mind that diluted Rules of Origin for Asean will bring greater pressure to adopt similar rules for the other FTAs being worked on, such as those with Japan and the EU. The larger issue is whether FTAs are a better bet than the multilateral WTO, which offers India the flexibility to go slow on reducing tariffs in sensitive areas (Special Products) and even hiking tariffs temporarily (Special Safeguards Mechanism) when there is sharp fall in global agricultural prices, for instance. FTAs do not offer this kind of flexibility (hence the term 'WTO-plus' used in trade jargon). It is also an open question as to what would happen to the stalled WTO talks if India were to make Asean-like concessions on agricultural imports available to all countries. |
First Published: Nov 23 2007 | 12:00 AM IST