October 9, 2023
2 mins read

UK negotiators in Delhi for talks on FTA

In December, India passed a law for enabling development of the country as an international arbitration centre…reports Asian Lite News

Trade negotiators from the UK are in India and on Monday both sides will sit together to sew up any remaining loose ends in the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) the two countries aim to sign, a senior official said.

The UK team’s visit follows India’s commerce secretary Sunil Barthwal’s visit to London last week to push the negotiations further. Both sides have so far concluded 13 rounds of talks. The official said another team from the UK is already in India for further talks on the Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT), to be inked along with the FTA.

“Everything is at the closure level,” the official added.

The investment treaty is being negotiated as a separate agreement. Investment treaties help promote and protect investments in both countries. They sometimes give partner countries greater freedom than other international investors.

The main point of contention in negotiations is about the mechanism for the settlement of disputes. India has proposed to first utilise all local judicial remedies before initiating international arbitration. It also wants any international arbitration that happens to happen in India. In December, India passed a law for enabling development of the country as an international arbitration centre.

Apart from BIT, the rules of origin and intellectual property rights (the latter two under the FTA) were some of the issues that were proving to be contentious in the negotiations. From the Indian side, the demand for easier visas for professionals was seeing some resistance from the UK. Differences in services have been sorted out on the lines of the UK’s FTA with Australia which came into force in May.

In the services sector, the UK has demanded national treatment for its services businesses and greater freedom for its professionals to operate in India. This has been agreed to. National treatment means treating foreigners and locals equally with regard to rules and regulations. It also means equal access to opportunities for overseas operators.

The UK was interested in financial, business and professional, and transport services. It also wanted a liberalised visa regime for its business travellers. “In services, professionals moving from India to the UK or the other way round are most likely to be Indian nationals or of Indian origin, so the issues have been sorted out,” the source said.

Among the other issues, the duties on whisky and automobiles were the two most sensitive issues for India.

In the auto sector, the reduction of tariffs on imports from the UK would be calibrated in a way that its impact on local manufacturing is minimal. In the spirits trade, both countries have narrowed their positions on immediate duty cuts and speed of cuts in coming years .

ALSO READ-Pakistan, GCC Sign Preliminary FTA

Previous Story

Sunak calls for de-escalation of India-Canada row in call with Trudeau

Next Story

Greek conservatives win in regional elections

Latest from -Top News

China to raise tariffs on US goods to 125%

Trump’s universal tariffs on China total 145%. When Trump announced Wednesday that China faced 125% tariffs, he did not include a 20% tariff on China tied to its role in fentanyl production

Thousands of immigrants off from Social Security

The policy aligns with other high-profile anti-immigration measures taken by Donald Trump’s White House since his second term began, including sending more than 200 suspected gang members to a notorious prison in

Modi may attend Russia’s V-Day celebrations

Defence Minister Rajnath Singh is likely to represent India at Russia’s Victory Day parade next month that will mark the 80th anniversary of the Soviet victory over Germany in the Second World
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Lammy raises human rights, Ukraine in Beijing talks

The foreign secretary had been under pressure to take a

Hunt rules out significant tax cuts in Budget  

Hunt took aim at Labour, citing Keir Starmer’s pledge not