Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA), which was concluded by the WTO in Bali in 2013, aims at easing customs procedures to boost global commerce.
Commerce Secretary Rita Teaotia said the agreement is important for boosting trade, simplifying customs rules and reducing the cost of trading.
"We are fully committed to it. It is a complex exercise and most of the consultation is complete and we believe that we should be able to ratify it at the earliest," she said here at the function of International Chamber of Commerce.
Teaotia also said that WTO members should move forward on liberalising the services sector as the segment assumes key importance for developing countries like India.
The sector is important for developing countries as a road for growth and employment generation, she said adding apart from accelerated flow of goods, the easier flow of services are also fundamental.
"We believe that just as we have a TFA (in goods), there is a need for us to work towards a services facilitation agreement. This should be the next item of work (in the WTO)," the secretary added.
India, she further said would have to be careful about the domestic policies which would come under greater scrutiny with the rise of GDP.
She said that India needs to "develop a roadmap to phase out" the agriculture export subsidies.
Talking about the stalled Doha Development Agenda (DDA), the secretary said work on it must continue as the decisions taken since 2001 needs to be respected and taken forward.
"We believe that without reaching some kind of respectable progress on the DDA, it is difficult to bring in new issues into the the WTO," she said adding in the DDA, there are legitimate interest of poor farmers and food security of millions of people of developing countries.
The meeting was attended by representatives of companies
including Paytm, Google and Snapdeal.
Asked by some ICC members about e-commerce issues being advanced by a number of countries at the WTO, Azevedo confirmed that while there was a lot of interest on the issue, no consensus had been reached on how to move forward.
Azevedo acknowledged that some countries had expressed a number of concerns and reservations, the statement said.
During the round-table, ICC India offered its strong support to the WTO and the Director-General in the work of the global trade body and would continue to advocate outcomes that supported Indian industry interests and objectives in WTO Geneva discussions, it added.
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