Business Desk, ETV Bharat: Even as Democrat Joe Biden prepares to take over as the 46th US President, defeating Donald Trump, India should not expect any major reboot in its trade equations with the US, according to a foreign trade specialist.
In a chat with ETV Bharat, Jayant Dasgupta, former Indian ambassador to the World Trade Organisation (WTO), said: “Trade relations between India and the US down the years have been more or less similar both during the Democrat and Republican regimes. So, I don’t expect any major change in the attitude of the US towards India after Biden becomes president.”
The overall bilateral trade between India and the US has increased significantly from $19 billion in 2000 to $142 billion in 2018. In fact, it is expected to cross $150 billion for the first time this year. However, tensions have persisted in the past few years because of the economic nationalisms being practised by the leaders of both nations.
Over the years, the US has openly shown its frustration with India’s high tariffs and its approach to intellectual property rights. The Trump administration has in fact followed through with punitive measures like imposing tariffs on steel and aluminium imports from India, among other countries, in 2018, and then by ending India’s preferential status under the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) programme last year. India then retaliated with its own tariffs on over $1.3 billion worth of US exports.
“Under the Trump presidency, two major issues surfaced. One, India’s removal from the US trade preference programme (GSP) and the unilateral duties slapped on the steel and aluminium imports coming from the country. The US didn’t follow objective criteria as laid down under WTO agreement while taking these decisions. It was an extreme step,” said Dasgupta.