Leading US congressmen have called on President Donald Trump to press Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to remove barriers to US trade and investment when they meet for the first time on Monday.
The lawmakers, from the Republican and Democratic parties, said in a letter to Trump that high-level engagement with India had failed to eliminate major trade and investment barriers and had not deterred India from imposing new ones.
“Many sectors of the Indian economy remain highly and unjustifiably protected, and India continues to be a difficult place for American companies to do business,” they wrote, noting that a 2017 World Bank report ranked India 130th out of 190 countries for ease of doing business.
The lawmakers - Republican House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady and Ranking Member Richard Neal, and Republican Senate Finance Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch and Ranking Member Ron Wyden - said the bilateral economic relationship “severely underperforms” as a result of India’s failure to enact market-based reforms.
Multiple sectors
They said the barriers covered multiple sectors and included high tariffs, inadequate protection of intellectual property rights, and inconsistent and non-transparent licensing and regulatory practices.
Among US goods affected were solar and information technology products, telecommunications equipment and biotechnology products, they said.
The lawmakers also pointed to limitations on foreign participation in professional services, restrictive foreign equity caps for financial, retail, and other major services sectors and barriers to digital trade and Internet services.
“The list is long and growing,” they said.
Meeting with CEOs, Trump
Modi is due to meet with about 20 leading US CEOs in Washington on Sunday before his first meeting with Trump on Monday at the White House, when he will seek to revitalize ties that have appeared to drift, in spite of the priority they were afforded under former President Barack Obama.
While progress is expected in defense trade and cooperation, Trump, who campaigned on an “America First” platform has been irritated by the growing US trade deficit with India and has called for reform of the H1B visa system that has benefited Indian tech firms.
Other signs of friction have included Trump accusing New Delhi of negotiating unscrupulously at the Paris climate talks to walk away with billions in aid.
Indian officials reject suggestions that Modi’s “Make in India” platform is protectionist and complain about the US regulatory process for generic pharmaceuticals and rules on fruit exports to the United States.
They stress the future importance of the huge Indian market to US firms and major growth in areas such as aviation which will offer significant opportunities for US manufacturers.
-
India clears plan for $3.10 bln second airport for Delhi
India will build a second international airport near its capital city in the next four to five years, costing an estimated 200 billion rupees ($3.10 ... Aviation & Transport -
India’s plan to develop key Iranian port faces US headwinds
Western manufacturers are shying away from supplying equipment for an Iranian port that India is developing for fear the United States may re-impose ... Features -
India calls for middle-income country coalition to revive globalization
India called on Thursday for a coalition of middle-income countries to drum up support for globalization as a political backlash in the United States ... Economy -
Amid Trump climate turmoil, France to push stability in India talks
France and India will seek to show a united front to tackle climate change when their leaders meet on Saturday with President Emmanuel Macron likely ... Energy