He said that the ‘Rules of
Origin’ have to be such that they do not impact the Indian automobile sector
negatively.
“FTA
with the UK is in the pipeline…we are negotiating. We are also very keen to see
that not only do we open up the automobile market, but we also see that we do
not unduly lose the level playing field vis-a-vis the UK.
“And we looked at their Rules
of Origin very, very closely. We negotiated with them (the UK), and we told them
that Rules of Origin have to be such that they do not negatively impact our
automobile sector market,” Barthwal said here while addressing leaders of the
auto industry.
The ‘Rules of Origin’ provision prescribes
minimal processing that should happen in the FTA country, the UK in this case,
so that the final manufactured product may be called originating goods in that
country.
Under
this provision, a country that has inked an FTA with India cannot dump goods
from some third country in the Indian market by just putting a label on it. It
has to undertake a prescribed value addition in that product to export to
India. Rules of Origin norms help
contain the dumping of goods.
The
secretary said that the government has rolled out the production linked
incentive (PLI) scheme for the auto sector “for a certain period and it should
not be disturbed through the FTA, till that phase is over”. “So, we have also
taken care of that till the time the PLI scheme is there. In fact, that is a policy decision that it (PLI) should not be
disturbed, and you should reap the full benefits of the PLI within the sector,”
he added.
The
India-UK talks for the proposed agreement began in January 2022. The 14th round
of talks stalled as the two nations stepped into their general election cycles.
The
Indian industry is demanding greater access for its skilled professionals from
sectors like IT and healthcare in the UK market, besides market access for
several goods at nil customs duty.On the other hand, the UK is seeking a
significant cut in import duties on goods such as scotch whiskey, electric
vehicles, lamb meat, chocolates and certain confectionary items.
Britain
is also looking for more opportunities for UK services in Indian markets in
segments like telecommunications, legal and financial services (banking and
insurance). The two countries are also
negotiating a bilateral investment treaty (BIT).
There
are 26 chapters in the agreement, which include goods, services, investments
and intellectual property rights. The
bilateral trade between India and the UK increased to $21.34 billion in 2023-24
from $20.36 billion in 2022-23.
Barthwal
also said that there are huge export opportunities for the automobile sector in
the global markets such as the European Union and the African nations. Africa
has potential for two-wheelers, tractors, agri vehicles like harvesters and
public transport.
“The US of course (is a big
market but), there is protectionism which is coming. They are also keen to develop
their manufacturing. But I think the market is so huge that everybody is eyeing
that market, and we should also eye that market,” he added.