INTERNATIONAL

IPR and rules of origin concerns under the proposed FTA are being worked out by India and the UK

An important government source said on Friday that India and the UK are trying to resolve discrepancies on matters like intellectual property rights (IPRs) and rules of origin under the free trade agreement being negotiated by the two nations.

The deal is now being discussed in its eleventh iteration in the UK. The trade agreement’s negotiations began in January 2021.

14 of the agreement’s 26 chapters, according to Commerce Secretary Sunil Barthwal, have been completed. Some significant problematic problems relating to the environment, employment, and digital commerce are covered in five chapters.

He told reporters here that this pact would be the “most complex” one that India will sign.

“UK will be the first with which we are going to have a comprehensive FTA, which we have not signed with any other developed country as such,” he said.

Regarding IPR and rules of origin (ROO), there are various variances.

“There are a few concerns with services as well…So, we are addressing those problems. Hopefully, we’ll be able to shut it down and relocate,” he said.

The ‘rules of origin’ section specifies the minimum amount of processing that must take place in the FTA country before the finished produced commodity may be referred to as originating in that nation.

According to this clause, a nation that has signed an FTA with India is not permitted to just label products imported from a third country and dump them on the Indian market. In order to export the goods to India, it must add a certain amount of value. Rules of origin regulations aid in preventing product dumping.

The recent statement by the commerce ministry that the India-UK free trade deal negotiations had reached a “critical stage” is accurate.

Piyush Goyal, the minister of commerce and industry, attended the FTA Talks in London from July 10 to 12.

There are up to 26 policy areas/chapters included in the agreement that the two nations are negotiating. Investment is being discussed as a separate deal (bilateral investment treaty) and would be signed concurrently with the free trade agreement between India and the UK.

Last year, the two nations missed the deadline as a result of the UK’s exceptional political and economic challenges.

The Indian business wants limitations relating to the three-year minimum maturation time to be removed in order to allow for better access for its trained workers to the UK market and the introduction of Indian whisky. Additionally, the UK wants to see the import taxes on Scotch whisky significantly reduced. Additionally, Britain seeks for possibilities for its services to expand into Indian markets.

Trade between the two nations grew from $17.5 billion in 2021–2022 to $20.36 billion in 2022–2023 as a result.

Ready-made clothing and textiles, diamonds, jewellery, engineering products, petroleum and petrochemical products, transport equipment, spices, machinery and instruments, medicines, and marine items are among India’s top exports to the UK.

Precious and semi-precious stones, ores, scrap metal, engineering products, non-electronic professional equipment, chemicals, and machinery are among the principal imports.

The UK is the biggest market in Europe for Indian IT services in the services industry.

The UK is one of the leading foreign investors in India’s financial sector. Britain made $1 billion in foreign direct investment in India in 2021–2022 but $1.74 billion in 2022–2023 instead. The investments totaled $33.9 billion between April 2000 and March 2023.

Such agreements ease regulations to encourage trade in services and investments while also reducing or eliminating customs tariffs on the maximum amount of products that may be exchanged between two trading partners.

Britain has traditionally been a leader in the service industry, with a $3.1 trillion economy, according to World Bank statistics. Indian businesses looking to obtain capital from the international market have long been drawn to London, one of the largest financial centres in the world.

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