[India did not assure the United States that it would “provide equitable and reasonable access to its markets in numerous sectors,” the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) said in a statement announcing the decision.]
By Niha Masih
NEW
DELHI — After months of
simmering trade tensions between the United States and India, President Trump
is following through on his threat to punish India for being what he called “a
very high-tariff nation.”
On Monday, Trump notified Congress that the
United States intends to end the preferential treatment for a host of Indian
goods that now enter the country duty-free. The changes will not take effect
for at least 60 days.
In a
letter, Trump said India would no longer receive benefits under the Generalized
System of Preferences, which was set up to promote trade from developing
countries.
India is the GSP’s biggest beneficiary and
exports about $5.6 billion in goods to the United States under the program, including
motor vehicle parts, precious-metal jewelry and insulated cables.
The United States remains India’s top export
partner, receiving more than $48 billion in goods from the country in 2017.
India did not assure the United States that
it would “provide equitable and reasonable access to its markets in numerous
sectors,” the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) said in a
statement announcing the decision.
Trump has made no secret of his frustrations
with Indian trade policy and has fixated on the duties the country charges on
Harley-Davidson motorcycles. On Saturday, during a speech at the Conservative
Political Action Conference, he once again brought it up.
“When we send a motorcycle to India, they
charge 100 percent tariff,” Trump said. “When India sends a motorcycle to us,
we charge nothing.” The claim was found to be true, although Harley-Davidson
has largely bypassed tariffs by assembling its bikes in India.
India’s response has been muted. Indian
Commerce Secretary Anup Wadhawan said the decision would not have a
“significant impact” on exports, according to Asian News International. The
“economic value of GSP benefits are very moderate,” he said.
Just over 10 percent of India’s current
exports to the United States actually benefit from the program.
The apparent decision to end India’s
preferential treatment comes after months of squabbling between the United
States and India over trade. Although the two countries are drawing close
together on military and strategic matters, there are frictions in other
arenas.
Trump has complained about India’s high
tariffs on American goods and about the U.S. trade deficit with India, which
stood at $27.3 billion in 2017, according to the USTR. Meanwhile, India
recently announced changes to its e-commerce rules that are considered
detrimental to American giants such as Walmart and Amazon. (Amazon founder
Jeffrey P. Bezos owns The Washington Post.)
In April 2018, the United States announced
that it was reviewing India’s status under the GSP program. Later in the year,
efforts by the two countries to resolve long-running trade issues faltered.
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