India declines to participate in trade negotiations with US-led group of Asian nations

11 September, 2022 | Pravina Srivastava

BeFunky collage 2022 09 11T120801.060 World

While moving forward with others in areas like as supply chains and renewable energy, India chose to withdraw from trade negotiations with the US-led group of Asian countries, once again avoiding o...

While moving forward with others in areas like as supply chains and renewable energy, India chose to withdraw from trade negotiations with the US-led group of Asian countries, once again avoiding opening access to its markets via a multi-country pact.

According to remarks made public following two days of negotiations in Los Angeles, the only member of the 14-country Indo-Pacific Economy Framework to not sign on to the group’s trade negotiating track was the South Asian nation.

President Joe Biden administration’s IPEF strategy seeks to strengthen connections with Asian countries through a variety of topics, including commerce, climate change, supply chains, and taxation. It is one of the US’s tools for containing China’s growing sway, though US officials have made clear that they are not pressuring allies to side with either Washington or Beijing.

India took a similar action in 2019 when it opted to end negotiations on the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, which is supported by China and is the largest regional free-trade deal in the world, covering about a third of the global population and GDP.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi claimed that he withdrew due to worries about how the RCEP will impact Indians’ livelihoods, particularly the most disadvantaged.

In a briefing on Friday, US officials stated that New Delhi’s choice not to participate highlighted the flexibility built into the IPEF framework. US Trade Representative Katherine Tai further stated that bilateral trade negotiations between the US and India will continue.

India’s commerce minister, Piyush Goyal, stated in a briefing that India wants to avoid any requirements that will affect developing nations and that the advantages of trade agreements relating to concerns including the environment, labour, and digital trade are yet unknown.

He continued “India will continue to participate and wait till the final details are established before we formally identify with the trade track.”

Representatives from IPEF nations gathered this week for the first time since their organisation in May to lay out their primary negotiating paths. At the same briefing, Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo stated that no agreement has yet been reached over the timing of the IPEF’s four tracks, or “pillars,” of negotiation.

Supply chains, the clean economy, which emphasises the switch to renewable energy sources and the battle against climate change, and the fair economy, which encompasses taxes and corruption concerns, were added to the list on Friday. All 14 nations have agreed on those three.

According to Raimondo, the countries are pursuing a “very ambitious timeframe.” A US official stated in May that the Biden administration hoped to have concrete commitments in place in 12 to 18 months.

When the United States hosts the Asia-Pacific Economic Partnership summit in November 2023, which advocates free trade, Raimondo said on Friday that it would be advantageous to have the IPEF pillars agreed upon.