WTO’s E-commerce Moratorium: Will India Betray the Interests of the Global South Again?

So far, the track record of the Narendra Modi government in standing firm against the Global North, particularly Washington, on e-commerce moratorium has been anything but beneficial for the country’s nascent digital industry.

India’s rhetoric of safeguarding the country’s digital trade interests faces a litmus test at an upcoming summit. So far, the track record of the Narendra Modi government in standing firm against the Global North, particularly Washington, on e-commerce moratorium has been anything but beneficial for the country’s nascent digital industry.

In June 2022, when the US and the G7 allies were almost isolated at the World Trade Organisation’s 12th ministerial conference in Geneva, there was a real opportunity to terminate the moratorium. However, India took a U-turn on its position and informed other countries that it has agreed to extend the moratorium on electronic transmissions for another two years.

If India had remained firm on its proposal, developing countries would not have lost billions of dollars in foregone revenues through customs duties on digital transmissions. That revenue could have been used to finance the much-delayed digital industrialisation.

As the WTO’s 13th ministerial conference starts in Abu Dhabi in just about 10 days, powerful digital trade lobbyists would be seen in every nook and corner of the conference hall. The US Senate Finance Committee has already issued a letter to the United States Trade Representative (USTR) to ensure the continuation of the moratorium. Last week, the G7 trade ministers called for a permanent moratorium.

Will India betray the interests of the Global South again?

The double standards of the US and its G7 allies are seemingly exposed against imposing e-commerce tariffs. While they maintain that “tariffs are a legitimate tool in the trade toolbox,” as stated by Katherine Tai, US trade representative, when it comes to tariffs on e-commerce, they want countries to surrender that policy tool.

In 2000, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development’s (UNCTAD) trade division had published a paper, titled ‘Tariffs, taxes and electronic commerce: revenue implications for developing countries’, which estimated the impact of the moratorium on developing countries, in terms of the potential tariff revenue losses.

The paper concluded that “the fiscal impact of international e-commerce is likely to be felt more strongly in the developing countries: they will face higher losses from customs duties, which make up higher shares in their national budgets compared with the developed countries. They will have less flexibility to replace those losses by shifting to other revenue sources, such as income taxes or social security contributions. In the short to medium term, developing countries will be net importers of e-commerce and hence will run a greater risk of losing tariff and tax revenues if traditional imports are replaced by online delivery. Therefore, the development of efficient tax collection systems for e-commerce should be a priority for all developing countries.”

Also read: Why Removing WTO Moratorium on E-commerce Will Aid Developing World’s Post-COVID Recovery

UNCTAD’s view on moratorium has remained the same over the years. In its publications in 2017, 2019, and 2020, and also in its various Trade and Development Reports, UNCTAD has fiercely argued for the removal of the WTO moratorium on electronic transmissions. UNCTAD, in the past five years, has produced three papers on moratorium and its flagship report, ‘Trade and Development (2019)’, provided estimates of potential tariff revenue losses to the developing countries of $10 billion every year.

However, with the new management in UNCTAD since 2021, under the leadership of Rebeca Grynspan Mayufis, there has been an attempt to steer UNCTAD’s stance on moratorium towards that of the advanced countries like the EU.

In fact, in 2023, UNCTAD joined hands with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), World Bank, and WTO to publish a report on ‘Digital Trade for Development’, which considerably shifts UNCTAD’s position on the moratorium towards that of the advanced countries.

Interestingly, the divisions which collaborated on this report from UNCTAD were not the ones which have been producing papers on the moratorium. This clearly shows the biases which are now taking roots within the organisation.

The joint report of UNCTAD on ‘Digital Trade for Development’ supports continuation of the moratorium on the basis that the revenue collected will be small (0.33% of overall government revenue on average); VAT could be a better way for taxing digital imports; and customs duties will adversely impact MSMEs and women. However, these arguments have been made before by the advanced countries in the EU in their various statements and communications. But these arguments are flawed.

The 0.33% on average is based on total government revenue of all countries, which include developed and developing countries.

The correct estimate should be on the total tariff revenue collected by the governments in the developing countries as developed countries’ tariff revenue collection on this is near zero, as their bound duties are almost zero. All potential tariff revenue losses are borne by the developing and least developed countries.

Further, using ‘all revenue collected by all government’ as the denominator is a gross underestimation of the potential tariff revenue collected from imports of electronic transmission, as the total revenue will include corporate taxes, individual taxes, as well as revenue collected by the government from other sources. For example, only one country, i.e., the US’s federal government collected $4 trillion as revenue in 2023.

Moreover, several questions remain unanswered, which could have benefitted developing countries.

For example, why should exporters of digital goods (primarily big tech firms) be exempted from paying customs duties, while exporters of physical goods pay both domestic taxes and customs duties?

If services trade via Mode 1 is included into the scope of the moratorium, do developing countries lose out on their GATS flexibilities, where they have the right to decide whether to apply discriminatory taxes or not? Why should developing countries not apply customs duties on imports of luxury items like video games, when they want to discourage these imports, especially in the face of food, fertilizer and energy crises?

In future, as more and more products leave their physical carriers while crossing borders, how significant will the tariff revenue loss become? How can governments in developing countries provide a level playing field for their domestic producers, if they do not use non-discriminatory tariffs and only use VAT?

Also read: Why WTO Is Not an Appropriate Forum for Negotiating E-commerce Rules

As countries are lagging on their Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), and only 12% of SDGs are on track, it is important that countries explore all the possible sources of generating revenues to enable them to close the funding gap. As more and more goods become digitalised, removal of the moratorium will provide the governments with a continuously growing source of revenue, which can be used to build their digital infrastructure, and progress on their Agenda 2030.

The revenue which is generated from the removal of the moratorium can help the governments to bridge their growing gender digital divide. The gender digital divide has been found to be rising steadily in developing countries and within developing countries, especially in Africa.

Further, the small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are exporters of mostly tangible goods in all countries. It is important to provide them a level playing field with the big exporters of digital products. Customs duties have always been used as a policy tool for protecting and nourishing infant industries in developing countries. Digital sector, especially MSMEs inthe  digital sector, need the protection and level playing field, which can be provided to them only with the removal of the moratorium.

More importantly, as awareness on the possible adverse impacts of AI is growing, advanced countries are making efforts to put in place regulations around the use of AI, but developing and least developed countries lack the capacities to regulate AI, which may enter their countries as electronic transmissions. Developing countries, therefore, need to start regulating and monitoring the imports of electronic transmissions. Removal of the moratorium will help in this process.

Moratorium on electronic transmissions has benefitted a handful of digital giants, such as Apple and Amazon, to increase their profits exponentially. Removal of the moratorium will help governments in all countries, including advanced member states, to gain regulatory space and track sales and profits of digital giants. As the digital revolution is still unfolding and the digital technologies are still evolving, making binding commitments for not regulating imports of electronic transmissions in future may have adverse consequences for digital transformation of countries, including in many developed member states.

In a nutshell, there is too much at stake for developing countries to allow the continuation of the moratorium. It is to be seen whether India will stick to its stand on terminating the moratorium at Abu Dhabi or allow its continuation as sought by the Biden Administration.

Watch | ‘RCEP Is Neither Necessary nor Sufficient for Us to Achieve Our Export Targets’

Economist Surjit Bhalla discusses the RCEP and the need for domestic reforms in an interview with The Wire.

“Cambodia had our breakfast, Vietnam had our lunch and Bangladesh had our dinner. We are very cognisant of the fact that we cannot let this opportunity go,” said economist Surjit Bhalla on the need for domestic reforms in an interview with The Wire.

Japan Says India Should Reconsider Decision to Leave RCEP

Japan, which had been keen that India should remain in RCEP to avoid domination of the group by one country, publicly felt that New Delhi could be still part of the economic agreement.

New Delhi: Japan continues to hope that India will reconsider its decision to leave Asia’s largest free trade pact and sign onto the dotted line by 2020, Japanese economy, trade and industry minister said in Bangkok on Tuesday.

A day earlier, India had announced that it had conveyed its decision to the other 15 participating countries not to join the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) agreement. “This reflects both our assessment of the current global situation as well as the fairness and balance of the agreement. India had significant issues of core interest that remain unresolved,” MEA Secretary (East) Vijay Thakur Singh had said.

RCEP was supposed to economically bring together all 10 ASEAN states, along with Australia, India, Japan, China, South Korea and New Zealand.

India’s decision was made public after the joint leaders’ statement after the RCEP summit announced that 15 countries have concluded text-based negotiations “for all 20 chapters and essentially all their market access issues; and tasked legal scrubbing by them to commence for signing in 2020.”

On India, the statement said that all RCEP participating countries will work together to resolve “these outstanding issues in a mutually satisfactory way”. “India’s final decision will depend on satisfactory resolution of these issues,” the statement noted.

Japan, which had been keen that India should remain in RCEP to avoid domination of the group by one country, publicly felt that New Delhi could be still part of the economic agreement.

“Japan will continue to play a leading role toward an early agreement of the 16 nations, including India, and for a signing of the agreement by the end of 2020,” Kajiyama said, as reported by Asahi Shimbun.

Also read: Invoking Mahatma Gandhi to Stay out of RCEP Is a Lazy Act

Interestingly, Kajiyama indicated that all the countries still shared the understanding that future negotiations for “legal scrubbing” would include all the 16 countries.

“We have not confirmed that India was actually leaving the process,” he added.

Singapore prime Lee Hsien Loong had also expressed regret that India was not part of RCEP, but “we hope one day it will come on board”.

“We hope one day that it will be possible, either because we can overcome the specific issues that are outstanding or India takes a different perspective, (for us to) come together and India will be part of the group,” he stated, as quoted by Channel News Asia.

Unlike Japan, China has asserted that the RCEP could be inked without India. “There won’t be any problem for the 15 nations to sign RCEP next year… We are taking an open attitude — whenever India is ready, it’s welcome to get onboard,” said Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Le Yucheng on Monday, according to Bloomberg.

While India had not blamed China in its public remarks on Monday, Indian government sources had maintained that the key issues that led to New Delhi’s withdrawal were a possible import surge from countries like China and no credible assurances on market access and non-tariff barriers.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi had told the closed-door meeting of the RCEP summit that the pact would not respect the interests of all Indians.

India Exits Asia’s Mega Trade Pact, Decides Not to Join RCEP Agreement

According to government sources, the trade agreement does not reflect its original intent and that the final outcome is not fair or balanced.

New Delhi: After months of negotiations, India has decided not to join Asia’s mega free trade pact, government officials said on Monday evening.

The other 15 countries involved in the deal – the 10 member states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and its five free trade agreement (FTA) partners – will go ahead with the process that will ensure a signed deal by 2020. 

At a press conference organised in Bangkok on Monday evening, India’s ministry of external affairs said that the move to drop out of the RCEP was correct.

“India conveyed its decision at the summit not to join the RCEP agreement. This reflects both our assessment of the current global situation as well as the fairness and balance of the agreement. India had significant issues of core interest that remain unresolved,” MEA Secretary (East) Vijay Thakur Singh said.

“India has participated in good faith in the RCEP negotiations and negotiated hard with a clear-eyed view of our interest. In the given circumstances, we believe that not joining the agreement is the right decision for India. We would continue to persevere and strengthen our trade, investment and people to people relations with the region,” Singh added.

Government sources said that “the prime minister stands firm as key concerns [were] not addressed.”

“There will be no compromise on core interests. [the] RCEP agreement does not reflect its original intent. [the] outcome [is] not fair or balanced,” government sources said.

The key issues that have become a sticking point include inadequate protection against an import surge from countries like China and no credible assurances on market access and non-tariff barriers.

“Our farmers, traders, professionals and industries have stakes in such decisions. Equally important are the workers and consumers, who make India a huge market and the third biggest economy in terms of purchasing power parity. When I measure the RCEP Agreement with respect to the interests of all Indians, I do not get a positive answer. Therefore, neither the Talisman of Gandhi-ji nor my own conscience permit me to join RCEP,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi reportedly said during a closed-doors meeting with other Asian leaders in Bangkok on Monday.

Modi is currently in Thailand’s capital to attend the East Asia Summit.

Joint statement

In a joint leaders’ statement put out on Monday evening, all 16 nations noted that while 15 of the participating countries had “concluded text-based negotiations for all 20 chapters”, India had “significant outstanding issues”.

“India has significant outstanding issues, which remain unresolved. All RCEP participating countries will work together to resolve these outstanding issues in a mutually satisfactory way. India’s final decision will depend on satisfactory resolution of these issues,” the statement noted.

“We noted 15 RCEP participating countries have concluded text-based negotiations for all 20 chapters and essentially all their market access issues; and tasked legal scrubbing by them to commence for signing in 2020.”

Home-grown criticism

In India, domestic opposition has solidified against the RCEP, with agricultural producers and farmers fearing that cutting tariffs on dairy and other produce would open the door to cheap Chinese imports and threaten sectors that support a vast swathe of the population.

The trade-wing of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh also carried out a nationwide campaign against the deal, saying any change in tariffs would cripple factories and farms at a time of slowing economic growth.

“RCEP shackles the hands of the government to take the required policy measures to strengthen manufacturing and agriculture,” said RSS economic leader Ashwani Mahajan.

Also read: How Consultative Has India’s RCEP Strategy Really Been?

Some supporters of the deal however  say it’s better for Indian agriculture to be in the trade zone than out.

“It would be better for India to have an open approach where agriculture can compete globally rather than adopt a conservative approach,” said A. K. Gupta, director of the Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority, which falls under the commerce ministry.

Other industry lobby associations that represent India’s formal and organised sector also believe that India should join the mega free trade deal.

The Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) for instance recently said that if India dropped out, it would be cut off from the RCEP region in terms of preferential access and that this would “hinder investments from many RCEP countries”.

“Not being part of the block is tantamount to not having an even footing in terms of preferential access and losing export competitiveness. This will only harm India’s export and investment flow in the future,” the CII said in a statement.

Differences within government

Within the government, the MEA had been pushing for India to be part of RCEP, while other ministries had differing opinions. “Ultimately, it was a political decision,” said a diplomatic source.

Singapore prime minister Lee Hsien Loong said that it was a “pity” that India was not part of RCEP, but “we hope one day it will come on board”.

“We hope one day that it will be possible, either because we can overcome the specific issues that are outstanding or India takes a different perspective, (for us to) come together and India will be part of the group,” he stated, as quoted by Channel News Asia.

A government source had noted that talks had gone on till 2 a.m. on Monday morning and then continued throughout the day. Even though both sides were aware that neither had much interest in compromising, negotiations did go to the last minute.

“We were still hoping and praying…,” said a diplomatic source from an ASEAN country.

It had been clear that the RCEP would have gone ahead in Bangkok this time, even if India did not join the club. “There was a decision within ASEAN at the June summit that RCEP will be completed, without India if required,” said an Indian government official.

At the post RCEP summit press conference by India, there were repeated questions from the Indian and foreign media on whether India would be willing to join the free trade agreement in the future. However, Singh, the senior Indian diplomat present did not give any definite answer, only repeating her earlier words. “I have already conveyed that we have conveyed to the participating countries that India will not be joining the RCEP,” she said.

The lack of a definite answer could mean that India wants to keep all options open. However, it will find the going tough to convince the other countries to make compromises.

As the diplomatic source noted, all the 15 countries have closed the RCEP chapter. “I would be very untenable to reopen again, because it essentially means that any other country can do so going forward,” he said. There is also a general fatigue with indefinite trade negotiations.

Doubts for region too

India’s absence from the biggest free trade agreement also raises questions about the regional architecture in East Asia.

The other participating countries, especially New Delhi’s friends, Japan and Singapore, had wanted India’s presence within RCEP to ensure that no one country – read China – dominated and influenced the body. This had been a recurring theme for most South East Asian nations to prop India in regional bodies since New Delhi framed its Look East policy.

India’s absence also raises a question mark about the concept of the Indo-Pacific, with the two important book-ends of the region, India and United States keeping out of RCEP and the Trans-Pacific Partnership respectively.

It was in India’s interest to make the Indo-Pacific concept represent something beyond security, and RCEP’s economic focus provided the perfect complementarity. But now that India is not part of the most important regional economic framework, it would be difficult to sell the Indo-Pacific idea to Asean.

Analysts believe India’s leverage to force concessions in the future is also highly limited. “If it joins “eventually”, it joins with other people’s rules. That’s the same problem the US may have on TPP. The US will think this TPP is a floor, the 11 will think it is a ceiling. They will accommodate the US part way because the US is, well, the US. But India is not the US,” Evan A. Feigenbaum, Vice President for Studies at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, told The Wire.

Ultimately, the Bangkok summit saw the emergence of a clear champion in geo-political terms. Not only did India not join RCEP, but the United States also downgraded its presence with the official delegation led by its national security advisor. “Only one Asian power clearly emerged the winner from this summit,” said the diplomat from an Asean member state.

In India’s RCEP Exit, Domestic Compulsions Sideline Fear of Being Isolated

Opposition to the RCEP in India has been stiff and led by the BJP’s home base.

New Delhi: In the background of intense domestic pressure, India has decided to not sign the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) for now. 

Domestic opposition to the RCEP has been stiff and led by the BJP’s home base. The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh’s economic wing – the Swadeshi Jagran Manch – organised a ten-day nation-wide agitation in October against the proposed free trade agreement. 

Farmer and industry bodies also joined the protests demanding that India stay away from signing the agreement. The bodies feared that the influx of cheaper goods from the 16 nations part of the proposed RCEP would lead to local industry and framers being at a comparative disadvantage.

Farmers’ concerns

Farmers and the dairy industry have been a worried lot with the prospect of RCEP. They held protests and even burned the effigy of Piyush Goyal, the minister in charge of negotiations. 

The prime concern in this area was that with RCEP, relatively cheaper milk and milk products from Australia and New Zealand could enter Indian shores and prove a threat to the livelihoods of Indian farmers. 

It was expected that the price of milk could reduce by between Rs 8 and 10 a kilogram if greater access to India’s markets was provided to members of the trade agreement through liberalised tariff rate quotas and phased duty reductions. 

Also read: India Exits Asia’s Mega Trade Pact, Decides Not to Join RCEP Agreement

Minsters within the government expressed reservations about the RCEP. Minister for agriculture and farmers’ welfare Narendra Tomar said in October that the “farmers’ interest is our priority and that must be kept in mind”. Prior to that, animal husbandry minister Sanjeev Balyan had also made the position of the dairy industry clear. 

Industry concerns

In an interview to The Wire, SJM’s national co-convenor, Ashwani Mahajan had said, “When we talk to the industry, we find that they are simply not ready for it. They will not be able to withstand the competition coming from outside. Industries will close.” 

Mahajan had also accused accused Indian bureaucrats of exceeding their brief and negotiating on terms that the political leadership was not keen on.

Manufacturers of appliances, iron and steel, aluminium, electrical machinery, plastic articles and furniture feared that with RCEP there would be increased dumping of cheaper goods into India which would make it difficult for local industry to survive. 

It was also expected that the Indian pharma industry could suffer as a result of a clause which would give more years of patent monopoly to patent holders. 

Concerns were also raised about India’s rising trade deficit with China which could have worsened with the free trade pact. 

Also read: How Consultative Has India’s RCEP Strategy Really Been?

While they haven’t mentioned China, Indian government sources also said that rising trade deficit with RCEP nations was one of the factors which led to India pulling out from the agreement. This government has also blamed past decisions taken during the UPA-era that led to such big deficits.  

“Indian domestic industry is still reeling under the impact of these decisions. Govt. under PM Modi has sought to solve these issues and these negotiations are continuing. It is therefore evident that India could not sign a further unequal deal under RCEP without resolving past issues in previous FTAs including ASEAN and ensuring a strict and fair framework in RCEP,” said government sources. 

One school of thought in this regard argues that India needs to prepare its own game-plan with regard to exports. This includes making  various manufacturing sectors more competitive first, which will then put New Delhi in a place to take better advantage of a mega free trade agreement.

Free trade visions

However, there is also another view on this – the pro free trade view. Well-known economist Arvind Panagariya recently wrote that India should not let the fear of increase trade deficit with China determine the fate of negotiations. 

He has argued that while India does have a significant trade deficit with China, its trade balance overall is healthy and does not have ‘unduly’ high foreign currency debt. 

“In its negotiations, India must also pay particular attention to the benefits it can reap from membership in RCEP through a large-scale movement of multinational enterprises. It is a reasonable expectation that its large domestic market, large pool of labour and relatively low wages would combine to make India a progressively attractive production base for multinational enterprises. Membership in the large RCEP market would multiply this attractiveness manifold for two reasons,” the former vice-chairman of Niti Aayog has noted.

“First, the membership will give multinationals locating in India tariff-free access to the vast RCEP market. And second, movement of inputs without tariffs and other frictions across borders of sixteen member countries would make the multinationals doubly competitive. Such movement is especially important in modern times because supply chain management requires inputs to cross international borders multiple times before being assembled into the final product. If tariff and friction characterise each crossing, costs multiply. ”

 The Confederation of Indian Industry has also recently spoken out in favour of the RCEP. It said that not signing the agreement would ‘hinder investments from many RCEP countries’ and push India back in its efforts to connect with regional and global chains. 

“Not being part of the block is tantamount to not having an even footing in terms of preferential access and losing export competitiveness. This will only harm India’s export and investment flow in the future,” the CII said. 

Donald Trump Hails ‘Phase One’ of US Trade Deal With China

Washington suspended the tariff hike on $250 billion in Chinese goods which were set to go into effect next week.

After 15 months of trade talks between Washington and Beijing, the two sides have “come to a very substantial phase one deal,” US President Donald Trump told reporters on Friday.

Trump did not provide details and said that the accord has yet to be put in writing. However, the US president said that it would include intellectual property rights and financial services.

“You’re very tough negotiators,” Trump told the Chinese delegation. The leader of the Chinese team, Vice Premier Liu He, said he was happy about the outcome. “We will continue to make efforts,” he told Trump in the Oval Office.

More breathing room on tariffs

The deal prompted the US to suspend a tariff hike on $250 billion (€226.5 billion) in Chinese goods which were set to go into force next Tuesday. The US will also consider revoking its currency manipulation designation against China, said Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.

Also read: Trump Administration Refuses to Participate in Impeachment Probe

However, according to Mnuchin, Trump has yet to make a decision on additional tariff hikes set to go into effect in December.

China reportedly pledged to step up buying of farm products.

Bigger deal coming?

US media reported that the preliminary deal should serve as a stepping stone for a more comprehensive accord which would be signed by Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping later in the year.

Chinese Vice Premier Liu He met with US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Mnuchin on Friday. Before personally meeting with the Chinese prime minister, Trump tweeted that “[g]ood things” were happening.

“Warmer feelings than in recent past, more like the Old Days,” he wrote. “All would like to see something significant happen!”

The trade war has so far resulted in US tariffs on over $360 billion of Chinese imports and retaliatory Chinese tariffs on $120 billion of American goods, mostly farm products. This week, the White House upped the ante by restricting travel for senior Chinese officials and blacklisting 28 Chinese companies over China’s persecution of Muslim Uighurs.

The article was originally published on DWYou can read it here.

US Delays Tariffs on Key Chinese Goods, Prompts Market Surge

China has said the tariffs were “not a constructive way” to resolve the trade conflict.

The United States said on Tuesday that it is delaying tariffs on some Chinese-made goods — including cellphones, laptops, shoes and clothing — that had been targeted for the measure from next month as part of a spiralling trade war.

Other Chinese items will be removed from the list of goods which will be hit with a 10% tariff from September 1.

The Office of the US Trade Representative said it would go ahead with tariffs on about $300 billion (€268 billion) of other Chinese goods imported to the US in a dispute over Beijing’s aggressive trade policies.

News of the delayed tariffs triggered a rally on Wall Street that saw the Dow Jones surge 2%.

Also read: Trump’s Trade Wars Are a Trap, Not a Solution

Trade talks in doubt

The next round of talks between China and the US is planned for next month in Washington, but the deterioration in relations has cast doubt on whether the meeting will take place.

US President Donald Trump accused Beijing of continuing to renege on its commitment to buy US agricultural goods.

“As usual, China said they were going to be buying ‘big’ from our great American Farmers. So far they have not done what they said. Maybe this will be different!” Trump posted on Twitter on Tuesday.

Solemn protest

Meanwhile Chinese Vice-Premier Liu He spoke with US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Tuesday, China’s Ministry of Commerce said in a statement.

The Chinese side said it made “solemn representation” on the tariffs.

“Both sides agree to talk again on the phone within two weeks,” the statement read.

This article was originally published in Deutsche Welle.

China and US Agree To Restart Trade Talks

The US and China agreed to resume trade talks, resolving a nearly year-long dispute that has caused a global economic slowdown.

Osaka: The US and China agreed on Saturday to restart trade talks and Washington will not levy new tariffs on Chinese exports, China’s foreign ministry said, raising hopes for the world’s two largest economies to resolve their trade war.

In their nearly year-long dispute, the two countries have slapped tariffs on billions of dollars of each other’s imports, disrupting global supply lines, roiling markets and dragging on global economic growth.

“We’re right back on track and we’ll see what happens,” US President Donald Trump told reporters after meeting Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Japan.

The eighty-minute meeting with Xi was “excellent, as good as it was going to be,” Trump added.

In a lengthy statement on the talks, China’s foreign ministry said the US would not add new tariffs on Chinese exports, and added that negotiators of both countries would discuss specific issues, but gave no details.

Xi told Trump he hoped the US could treat Chinese companies fairly, it added. On the issues of sovereignty and respect, China must safeguard its core interests, Xi said.

Also read: PM Modi Meets Presidents of Indonesia, Brazil; Focus on Bilateral Ties and Trade

Before the talks, Trump had threatened to extend existing tariffs to cover almost all imports from China into the US if the meeting brought no progress on wide-ranging US demands for economic reforms.

The dispute, which includes a feud over Huawei Technologies Co had also fanned fears it could threaten global growth.

Financial markets were likely to welcome the news.

“Returning to negotiations is good news for the business community and breathes some much-needed certainty into a slowly deteriorating relationship,” said Jacob Parker, a vice-president of China operations at the US-China Business Council.

US President Donald Trump meets with China’s President Xi Jinping at the start of their bilateral meeting at the G20 leaders’ summit in Osaka, Japan. Photo: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque

“Now comes the hard work of finding consensus on the most difficult issues in the relationship, but with a commitment from the top we’re hopeful this will put the two sides on a sustained path to resolution,” he said.

Also read: BRICS Leaders Call for Transparent, Inclusive International Trade

“Cooperation and dialogue”

At the start of Saturday’s talks, Xi stressed the need for dialogue rather than confrontation.

“Cooperation and dialogue are better than friction and confrontation,” he said.

Trump responded that a fair trade deal with China would be “historic” and he hoped “We can go on to do something that truly will be monumental and great for both countries.”

The US says China has been stealing American intellectual property for years, forces US firms to share trade secrets as a condition for doing business in China, and subsidizes state-owned firms to dominate industries.

China has said the US is making unreasonable demands and must also make concessions.

Talks collapsed in May after Washington accused Beijing of reneging on reform pledges. Trump raised tariffs to 25% from 10% on $200 billion of Chinese goods, and China retaliated with levies on US imports.

US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping shake hands before a bilateral meeting during G20 summit in Osaka, Japna, Photo: Reuters/ Kevin Lamarque

At their meeting, the leaders shook hands in front of flags in a small conference room, with Trump flanked by the secretary of state Mike Pompeo, a China hawk, and treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin, who has taken a more business-friendly approach to the talks.

Trump adviser Peter Navarro, known as the author of a book “Death by China,” watched Xi intently as he spoke.

Also read: Modi Woos Trump on Trade With Carrots on Iran, 5G  

The dispute had spread beyond trade as US-China ties soured. The Trump administration has declared Chinese telecoms giant Huawei a security threat, effectively banning US companies from doing business with it.

American officials have also pressed other governments to drop Huawei from plans to develop fifth generation, or 5G, networks.

Trump has suggested easing US restrictions on Huawei could be a factor in a trade deal with Xi while China has demanded the US drop the curbs, saying Huawei presents no security threat.

As G20 officials worked in Osaka to hammer out a communique on shared goals, Japan’s Nikkei newspaper said they would agree to accelerate reforms of the World Trade Organization, but stop short of urging resistance to protectionism.

(Reuters)

Japan Complains at WTO Over India’s Import Duties on Mobile Phones

The complaint said that India had sought to foster domestic production by adjusting various taxes including custom duties.

Geneva: Japan has complained at the World Trade Organisation about India’s duties on mobile phones, base stations and routers, and the circuit boards and other components that go into them, a WTO filing showed on Tuesday.

Japan’s complaint, the first step in a legal dispute, said that India had sought to foster domestic production by adjusting various taxes including customs duties, especially since it launched the “Make in India” campaign in September 2014.

Some of the tariffs on goods of substantial interest to Japan were now “clearly in excess” of the rates allowed by the WTO, Japan said.

India’s WTO membership terms specified that the import tariff on all the disputed goods was zero percent, but India applied a 20% tariff to mobile phones and base stations, and tariffs of 10%, 15% and 20% on the other products, Japan said.

Also Read: Why India Has Had a Heated Year at the World Trade Organisation

Trade data provided by the International Trade Centre, a UN-WTO joint venture, showed Japan accounted for a tiny proportion of India’s mobile phone imports, valued at $53 million in 2011 and $43 million in 2012, but less than $2 million in all other years in the past decade.

India’s mobile phone imports are dominated by China, although its appetite for foreign phones has shrunk fast, with total imports sliding from a 2014 peak of $7.1 billion to below $1.5 billion in 2018, the data showed.

India’s imports of switchers and routers, totalling $5.7 billion in 2018, were dominated by China and Vietnam, while imports from Japan were worth $52 million, less than 1% of the Indian import market.

Under WTO rules, India has 60 days to settle the dispute, but after that Japan could ask the WTO to set up an adjudication panel to say whether India’s tariffs break the rules.

Trump Orders Tariff Hike on Remaining Imports From China

The move is expected to escalate the trade war between the US and China.

Washington: US President Donald Trump has ordered his top officials to begin the process to raise tariffs on almost all the imports from China, US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said on Friday.

This amounts to about $300 billion. This is in addition to the Chinese imports worth $200 billion on which Trump increased the import duty from 10% to 25%, beginning Friday.

“Earlier today, at the direction of the President, the United States increased the level of tariffs from 10% to 25% on approximately $200 billion worth of Chinese imports,” Lighthizer said.

“The president also ordered us to begin the process of raising tariffs on essentially all remaining imports from China, which are valued at approximately USD 300 billion,” he said.

“The process for public notice and comment will be published shortly in the Federal Register. The details will be on the USTR website on Monday as we begin the process prior to a final decision on these tariffs,” Lighthizer said.

Expected to escalate the trade war between US and China, the latest Trump move came as the Chinese Vice Premier concluded his two days of trade talks with the US team led by Lighthizer.

In a series of tweets, Trump described the talks as candid and constructive, but indicated taking a tough approach against massive imbalance of trade with China.

“Over the course of the past two days, the United States and China have held candid and constructive conversations on the status of the trade relationship between both countries,” he said.

Also Read: Tensions Between US and China Ratchet up as Tariff Hikes Set to Take Effect

“The relationship between President Xi and myself remains a very strong one, and conversations into the future will continue,” he added.

“In the meantime, the United States has imposed tariffs on China, which may or may not be removed depending on what happens with respect to future negotiations!” Trump said.

“Tariffs will bring in far more wealth to the United States than even a phenomenal deal of the traditional kind. Also, much easier & quicker to do. Our farmers will do better, faster, and starving nations can now be helped. Waivers on some products will be granted, or go to new source!” he said in another tweet.

“If we bought 15 billion dollars of agriculture from our Farmers, far more than China buys now, we would have more than 85 billion dollars left over for new infrastructure, healthcare, or anything else. China would greatly slow down, and we would automatically speed up!” Trump said.

Referring to his latest direction, Trump said that the process has begun to place additional tariffs at 25% on the remaining 325 billion dollars. “The US only sells China approximately 100 billion dollars of goods and products, a very big imbalance,” he said.

“With the over 100 Billion Dollars in tariffs that we take in, we will buy agricultural products from our great farmers, in larger amounts than China ever did, and ship it to poor & starving countries in the form of humanitarian assistance. In the meantime, we will continue to negotiate with China in the hopes that they do not again try to redo deal!” said the US president.

Trump said he is in no rush to conclude trade talks with China.

“Talks with China continue in a very congenial manner – there is absolutely no need to rush – as tariffs are now being paid to the United States by China of 25% on 250 billion dollars worth of goods & products. These massive payments go directly to the Treasury of the US,” he said.

“We have lost 500 billion dollars a year, for many years, on Crazy Trade with China. No more!” Trump said.

(PTI)