India and the 10-country Southeast Asian bloc ASEAN signed a free trade agreement today after more than six years of negotiations, but the deal did not embrace software and information technology.
Thai and Indian officials said the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) would eliminate tariffs on products including electronics, chemicals, machinery and textiles that account for more than 80 per cent of total trade in goods between the two sides.
The agreement will be effective from January 1st, 2010, and tariffs on the products covered would be reduced to zero between 2013 and 2016, according to a joint statement.
The agreement was signed in Bangkok on the sidelines of a meeting of economic ministers of Association of South East Asian Nations - grouping Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.
After strong lobbying by India's farm sector, led by southern Kerala and Karnataka states, the terms of the FTA let India protect its agricultural sector by excluding 489 products, mostly commodities including rubber, from tariff cuts.
Tariffs on a much smaller list of products described as “highly sensitive”, including palm oil and coffee, would be reduced over about 10 years, but only modestly.
Kerala state had objected to slashing duties on fish, rubber, palm oil, pepper, tea and coffee.
Indonesia and Malaysia had actively sought Indian tariff cuts on palm oil products, but India insisted on protecting its products from cheaper ASEAN imports, mainly from those countries.
Amit Mitra, secretary-general of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, told reporters before the signing: “We came to the conclusion that it will be a win-win for both sides. Our minds have met. Of course, a few will lose, but many more will gain”.
He said the ASEAN countries were not yet ready for an FTA encompassing software, information technology and tourism.
“India has the most powerful IT and software industry in the developing world ... It is still not clear when ASEAN can conclude an IT agreement with India. As soon as we sign this today, we will start negotiations on an IT agreement,” he added.
ASEAN is India's fourth-largest trading partner after the European Union, the United States and China. Two-way trade between India and ASEAN was $47 billion in 2008, the statement said.
Reuters