Amid the latest global developments on tariffs, it
seems more likely that India could well be signing multiple Free Trade
Agreements (FTAs) in a very short period of time, according to Sanjiv Puri,
president, Confederation of Indian Industry (CII). Speaking at a CII conference on Wednesday, Puri, ITC Ltd Chairman, said
an India-US trade agreement would bring down tariffs and that would essentially
make India competitive and open up many more markets as far as the country is
concerned.
“The EU (European Union) FTA is very important for
India. It has been under discussion for more than two decades. So hopefully
this year we should see the culmination of many such FTAs. And, the government
is also pushing for an FTA with the US in the context of what we are having on
tariffs. I think that is a very good development, and this will bring down
tariffs,” Puri said.
Amid US
President Donald Trump’s tariff threats, India and the European Union have set
the year-end deadline to conclude a free trade agreement.
During the recent visit of EU Commissioner for
Trade and Economic Security Maros Sefcovic, the two sides have discussed ways
to accelerate efforts towards a balanced and mutually beneficial trade pact. “We know the growth rates have been tepid.
We are also aware that geoeconomics and geopolitics, all that are adversely
impacted economic progress. So it was already not a conducive environment, and
there is increasing uncertainty on account of certain discussions that are
happening as far as tariffs are concerned,” Puri said, adding India was
presently also faced with the issue about excess capacities in certain parts of
the world that were finding their way into the country at uneconomical prices
and also taking away opportunity for potential exports.
According to the CII president, amid a global
challenging situation, the Indian economy is doing reasonably well on the back
of a lot of good policy interventions. “In
any challenge, there are also opportunities. And if you look at what is
happening in India, I think it is something that we should all feel good
about...of course we would like that (GDP growth rate) to be 7-8 per cent
because that is the potential that India has got. But nonetheless, I think in
the whole world, India is a beacon of hope and promise. The IMF expects
India to contribute 16 per cent to global growth, and this is likely to rise to
18 per cent by 2028,” Puri said while speaking at the event virtually... “There
are several areas that CII has been highlighting and has been in discussion. Several
of our suggestions, of course, found their way into the budgets. But there is,
of course, some of these are being initiated and work needs to be done. But just to give you a sense on the
policy priorities that we have set up, I think first and foremost, we are
saying that investment in physical infrastructure should continue along with
fiscal consolidation,” the ITC Chairman said adding the fiscal glide path
would hopefully also bring in a regime where interest rates are even more
moderate and private investment is going to create more jobs. “The second piece of our suggestions goes
around the next generation of reforms. What are the next generation of deep
structural reforms that can make India even more competitive and unlock the
potential. And, there are many. There are several areas that we have
articulated and we are working towards, be it with judiciary, energy, land,
factor markets like labour and so on and so forth,” Puri added.
The Confederation of Indian Industry has elected
Shashwat Goenka, Vice Chairman, RP – Sanjiv Goenka Group, as the chairman of
CII Eastern Region Council for the year 2025 – 26. Goenka is also the Chairman
of Spencer’s Retail and Vice Chairman of CESC, Firstsource Solutions, and
director of PCBL Chemical Limited.