Mike Pompeo visit to India: Trade, e-commerce disputes likely to top US Secretary of State's New Delhi agenda
New Delhi:
New Delhi:
Pompeo is expected to lay the ground for a meeting between US President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi later in the week at a G20 meeting in Japan. Both countries are trying to promote domestic manufacturing.
Under a 'Make in India' campaign, Modi has been courting foreign investors. Trump has pushed for US manufacturing to return home as part of his “Make America Great Again” campaign.
The two countries also have differences over Russian arms sales to India and US sanctions on China’s Huawei Technologies Co Ltd.
Also Read ; Bangladesh vs Afghanistan, ICC Cricket World Cup 2019: Five-star Shakib Al Hasan propels Tigers into fifth-place with 62-run victory
Tariffs, closed markets
India this month imposed higher tariffs on 28 US products including almonds, apples and walnuts, following the US withdrawal of certain trade privileges for India.
Trump has called India “tariff king”, and pointed to 50% duties on Harley Davidson motorbikes as an example. The Trump administration has also asked India to remove price caps on imported US medical devices, open up its dairy market and cut duties on IT products.
Also Read ; Encephalitis deaths in Bihar: Clinical ambiguity, delayed access to medical care raise questions about steps taken to prevent disease
Data localisation, e-commerce
India has mandated foreign firms to store their payments data locally, hurting companies such as Mastercard and Visa.
This week, India has been alarmed at the possibility of caps on H-1B work visas that allow thousands of skilled Indians to work in the United States, as retaliation for its data localisation drive. The State Department, though, has said there were no such plans.
India outlined a new draft policy for its e-commerce sector this year, focusing on data localisation, improved privacy safeguards and measures to combat the sale of counterfeit products.
Tighter e-commerce foreign investment rules implemented in India in February have forced Amazon.com Inc and Walmart Inc to rework their business strategies in the country. Walmart last year invested $16 billion in Indian online retailer Flipkart.
Also Read ; Deepika Padukone
India outlined a new draft policy for its e-commerce sector this year, focusing on data localisation, improved privacy safeguards and measures to combat the sale of counterfeit products.
Tighter e-commerce foreign investment rules implemented in India in February have forced Amazon.com Inc and Walmart Inc to rework their business strategies in the country. Walmart last year invested $16 billion in Indian online retailer Flipkart.
Also Read ; Deepika Padukone
Huawei on export blacklist
The United States has put China’s Huawei on an export blacklist citing national security issues, barring US suppliers from selling to the world’s largest telecommunications equipment maker and second-biggest maker of smartphones, without special approval.
It is asking its allies to adopt shared security and policy measures that will make it more difficult for Huawei to dominate 5G telecommunications networks. India has not decided whether to invite the Chinese firm for 5G trials.
Russia's S-400 missile system
The United States has said that India’s plan to buy S-400 surface-to-air missile systems from Russia would draw sanctions under its Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions law. India, which signed the deal last year, says the weapons are necessary to bolster defences against China.
No comments:
Post a Comment