[Yet Mr. Trump has voiced little interest in such policy questions or the rounds of negotiations that have kept the two countries from an all-out trade war. Instead, he has been publicly riveted by one small pawn in the game: India’s tariffs on a few hundred high-end Harley-Davidson motorcycles sold here each year.]
By
Vindu Goel
A
ride on the outskirts of Mumbai, India, that a local Harley-Davidson club
organized
in October. Credit
Atul Loke for The New York Times
|
MUMBAI,
India — When it comes to
trade, it often seems that India and the United States are playing a perplexing
game of multidimensional chess.
On Friday, for example, India will decide
whether to impose or again delay tariffs on American almonds, apples, walnuts
and processed metal products in retaliation for the Trump administration’s
decision in March to impose tariffs on steel and aluminum imports.
Next week, President Trump and his advisers
will have to decide whether to penalize India for failing to abide by his
Sunday deadline for all countries to stop importing oil from Iran.
“The sanctions threat and the tariffs are in
many ways linked,” said Sreeram Chaulia, dean of the school of international
affairs at O. P. Jindal Global University outside New Delhi.
Yet Mr. Trump has voiced little interest in
such policy questions or the rounds of negotiations that have kept the two
countries from an all-out trade war. Instead, he has been publicly riveted by
one small pawn in the game: India’s tariffs on a few hundred high-end
Harley-Davidson motorcycles sold here each year.
Three times this year when Mr. Trump brought
up the American trade relationship with India, he complained about the import
duties — currently 50 percent — that India levies on Harleys and other
foreign-made motorcycles.
“You send a motorcycle into India, there’s a
100 percent tariff,” Mr. Trump said at a news conference in early October,
misstating the rate. “Who’s going to buy it? It costs you so much. Now, they
have already reduced that substantially, but it’s still too high.”
Mr. Trump’s single-minded focus on Harleys
has mystified trade experts in both countries.
“Harley-Davidson is not going to erase the
trade deficit,” Mr. Chaulia said. In the context of the $126.2 billion in
overall trade between the two countries, Harleys are not even a rounding error.
Passenger jets, oil and gas, gemstones, and foods like almonds and chickpeas
are far more important products.
Most of the 3,000 Harleys sold in India last
year did not incur any tariffs. That’s because they were cheaper, low-powered
models made in a factory outside New Delhi. Even many of the fancier bikes sold
here were assembled from kits of imported parts, which are taxed at 15 percent,
not 50 percent.
Harley-Davidson’s biggest problem in India is
a lack of demand.
Harleys are bulky and heat up a rider’s legs,
making them a poor fit for the country’s traffic-choked roads and sweltering
climate. And they are expensive. With an average annual income of $1,700,
people here overwhelmingly favor small, cheap bikes, some of which cost less
than $1,000. Harley’s iconic big cruisers cost more than most cars, with its
top model exceeding $87,000 in Mumbai after all taxes and licensing fees.
Darryl Mathias, operations manager for the
Mumbai dealership, Seven Islands Harley-Davidson, said sales had dropped about
50 percent in the past two years. He blamed rising gasoline prices and the
Indian government’s efforts to crack down on cash transactions more than the
tariffs.
“People don’t want to show their wealth,” he
said.
American officials say the president
initially seized on the Harley tariffs after the Milwaukee company’s chief
executive, Matthew Levatich, complained to him about them. When Mr. Trump
raised the issue with Prime Minister Narendra Modi this year, India dropped the
tariffs from 75 percent to 50 percent.
Harley-Davidson executives declined interview
requests. In a statement, the company said it “supports President Trump’s
efforts to lower tariffs and make American manufacturers more competitive.”
Indian and American government officials also
declined to elaborate about the trade relationship, citing active negotiations
and the pending decisions on tariffs and sanctions.
For most officials in the two countries, the
trade relationship is much more complicated than just motorcycles.
The United States and India have been arguing
over trade since the Obama administration, when they tangled over American exports
of eggs and solar panels to India as well as India’s weak protections for
foreign intellectual property such as drug formulas.
Trade hawks in the Trump administration such
as Robert E. Lighthizer, the United States trade representative, have made the
$27.3 billion trade deficit in goods and services with India a key issue.
American dairy farmers, for example, complain that they do not have fair access
to India’s markets because of high tariffs and India’s requirement that all
milk comes from cows that have not been fed the internal organs of other
animals. That milk certification is important to Hindus, many of whom are
vegetarians, but many American farmers cannot meet it.
Silicon Valley companies including Google and
Facebook are also pressing the United States government to help them dilute or
fend off India’s proposed data protection laws, which would limit the use of
data collected about Indians and limit the transfer of data outside the
country.
“We need to have reciprocal trade,” Gilbert
B. Kaplan, the American under secretary of commerce for international trade,
said at a conference hosted by the U.S.-India Business Council here in
September.
This year, India irked American companies by
increasing tariffs on products ranging from shoes to mobile phones to help
balance its budget and stem a fall in the value of the rupee.
Separately, the country announced that it
would raise tariffs on 29 categories of American goods, including nuts, apples
and finished metal products, in response to Mr. Trump’s steel and aluminum
tariffs.
The items targeted influential industries
such as almond growers, who last year shipped $651 million of the nuts to
India, their largest market. But India deferred the start of the tariffs from
June to September and then to Nov. 2. The government may well delay the tariffs
again, Mr. Chaulia said, to assess the outcome of Tuesday’s midterm elections
in the United States and what effect that would have on the American
negotiating position.
India, for its part, wants the United States
to reduce tariffs on its exports of clothing and textiles, for which it pays
higher duties than neighboring countries like Bangladesh and Pakistan. The Modi
administration is also adamant about maintaining its hefty subsidies for
homegrown agricultural products to court Indian farmers, who are a key voting
bloc.
Looming over everything are geopolitical
concerns.
In addition to continuing oil purchases from
Iran, Mr. Modi signed a deal with Russia’s president, Vladimir V. Putin, on
Oct. 5 to buy Russian S-400 antiaircraft missile systems. The $5.2 billion
purchase violates American trade sanctions against Russia and will eventually
trigger penalties for India unless Mr. Trump approves a waiver.
Officials in the State and Defense
Departments are urging Mr. Trump to give India some leeway on both issues as
part of an effort to forge a closer military and diplomatic partnership against
China in the region. India has already reduced its reliance on Iranian oil,
they argue, and the American defense contractors Lockheed Martin and Boeing are
hoping to land a military jet order from India that could be worth $15 billion.
Trade experts predict that neither country
will be quick to antagonize the other.
“Under no circumstance would the Indian
government give up its close relationship with the U.S. government,” said
Biswajit Dhar, a professor of economics at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New
Delhi who has represented the Indian government on trade issues and formerly
served on the board of the Export-Import Bank of India.
Mr. Chaulia said India was also clear about
its economic commitment to Iran. India has invested heavily there, including
hundreds of millions of dollars in the seaport of Chabahar in southeastern
Iran. The Trump administration wants a regime change in Iran — and India does
not, he said.
Eliminating the Harley tariffs is a way to
ease the trade drama and please the American president, Mr. Chaulia said. “All
Trump needs is to declare a win,” he said. “He doesn’t care about the
nitty-gritty.”
Follow Vindu Goel on Twitter: @vindugoel.
Alan Rappeport and Gardiner Harris
contributed reporting from Washington, and Maria Abi-Habib from New Delhi.
Ayesha Venkataraman contributed research.