Commerce
and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal will visit
Washington next week as India, and the US are planning to negotiate a bilateral
trade agreement, an official said. The
visit will start on March 3 and the minister is expected to be in the US till
Friday, the official added.
During
the recent visit of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Washington,
India and the US announced their commitment to more than double the two-way
commerce to $500 billion by 2030 and negotiate the first tranche of a mutually
beneficial, multi-sector Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) by fall of 2025. Goyal is likely to hold talks with US
Trade Representative (USTR) Jamieson Greer and US Commerce Secretary Howard
Lutnick during the visit.
The
commerce ministry has already started engagements with different departments on
the India-US trade aspects and related developments.
The
proposed agreement is an opportunity to boost bilateral trade and investments
between the two countries amid threat of US President Donald Trump to impose
higher tariffs on Indian goods. Tariffs
are import duties imposed and collected by government and paid by the companies
to bring foreign goods into the country...Goyal has earlier stated that the
two countries can offer concessions and duty reductions, as their economies
complement each other...During the first
term of US President Donald Trump, the two countries had discussed a mini-trade
deal, but it was shelved by the Joe Biden administration as they were not in
favour of such pacts.
In
2023, the US-India bilateral trade in goods and services stood at $190.08
billion ($123.89 billion in goods and $66.19 billion in services trade). That
year, India's merchandise exports to the US stood at $83.77 billion, while
imports were $40.12 billion, leaving a trade gap of $43.65 billion in favour of
India. The country's services export to America was $36.33 billion in 2023,
while imports were aggregated at $29.86 billion. The trade gap (difference between imports and exports) was $6.47
billion in favour of New Delhi. During 2021-24, America was the largest trading
partner of India. The US is one of the few countries with which India has a
trade surplus.
In
2023-24, the US was the largest trading partner of India with $119.71 billion
bilateral trade in goods ($77.51 billion worth of exports, $42.19 billion of
imports, with $35.31 billion trade surplus).
India
has received $67.8 billion in foreign direct investments from America during
April 2000 and September 2024.