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Business Environment




                    Notes
                                     WTO negotiations have been facing a roadblock since December 2008, when Lamy made
                                     a strong  push for convening another  ministerial in  Geneva to  finalize modalities for
                                     agriculture and NAMA following the failure of talks at ministerial meeting in July last
                                     year at Geneva. On December 6 last year, WTO brought out revised draft modalities for
                                     agriculture and NAMA. As the texts are yet to be discussed at the WTO, the DG decided
                                     against convening  a ministerial.  Lamy proposed  resumption of  negotiations early  in
                                     2009, using the revised draft as a starting point.
                                     But the negotiations have not resumed since then. It was in this context that India took the
                                     initiative to restart the process again. The Delhi meeting is the first occasion since July
                                     2008 when the ministers representing practically all major blocs such as the group of 10
                                     (G-10), G-33, G-20, NAMA 11, Least Developed Countries, Small and Vulnerable Economies,
                                     African Group, Cotton 4 and others are participating.

                                     The meeting is being  attended by  the ministers  from the  US, European Commission,
                                     Brazil, South Africa and China among others.

                                   Source:  timesofindia.indiatimes.com

                                   13.8 Impact of WTO on India

                                   In the new WTO environment, the buzzwords would be efficiency and productivity. "Success
                                   will lie with those who exhibit competitiveness in price and quality." P.K. Kaul , Former Indian
                                   Ambassador to USA.
                                   The Indian economy experienced a major transformation during the decade of the 1990s. Apart
                                   from the impact of various unilateral economic reforms undertaken since 1991, the economy has
                                   had to reorient itself to the changing  multilateral trade  discipline within  the newly written
                                   GATT/WTO framework. The unilateral trade policy measures have encompassed exchange-rate
                                   policy, foreign  investment, external  borrowing, import licensing, custom  tariffs and export
                                   subsidies. The multilateral aspect of India's trade policy refers to India's WTO commitments
                                   with regard to trade in goods and services, trade related investment measures, and intellectual
                                   property rights.
                                   The multilateral trade liberalisation under the auspices of the Uruguay Round Agreement and
                                   the forthcoming  WTO negotiations  is  aimed  at reducing  tariff  and  non-tariff  barriers  on
                                   international trade.
                                   India is a founding member of the GATT (1947) as well as of the WTO, which came into effect
                                   from January 1, 1995.  By virtue of its WTO membership, India automatically avails of Most
                                   Favoured Nation Treatment (MFN) and National Treatment (NT) from all WTO members for its
                                   exports and vice versa. Its participation in this increasingly rule-based system is aimed towards
                                   ensuring more stability and predictability in its international trade.

                                   The Uruguay Round resulted in increased tariff binding commitments by developing countries.
                                   India bound 67% of its tariff lines compared  to 6% prior to this round. The government has
                                   simplified  the  tariff, eliminated  quantitative  restrictions  on imports,  and  reduced  export
                                   restrictions. It plans to further simplify and reduce the tariff.
                                   All agricultural tariff lines and nearly 62% of the tariff lines for industrial goods are now bound.
                                   Ceiling bindings for industrial goods are generally at 40% ad valorem for finished goods and
                                   25% on intermediate goods, machinery and equipment. The phased reduction to these bound
                                   levels is to be achieved during the 10-year period commencing in 1995. Tariff rates on equipment
                                   covered under the Information Technology Agreement are to be brought down to zero by 2005.






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