US tells India to cut tariffs as trade friction heats up
NEWDELHI: US businesses and diplomats are pressing India to cut tariffs, according to people in the know, after New Delhi’s move to increase customs duties on dozens of products to help the government’s flagship Make in India drive aggravated differences over trade.
Ford, which has two plants in India, has sought a reversal of the new tariffs on auto components, while Apple Inc. is concerned its iPhones have become even more expensive in the price-conscious $10 billion smartphone market.
India and the US have built close political ties and Prime Minister Narendra Modi was in Washington last summer, bearhugging President Donald Trump in his personalised style of diplomacy. But trade friction is casting a shadow.
A US State Department spokesperson in Washington told Reuters that India should lower trade barriers, which were holding back economic ties. Trump has already called out India for its duties on Harley-Davidson motorbikes, and this month Modi ordered them cut to 50% from 75% for high-end bikes.
But that has not satisfied Trump, who pointed to zero duties for Indian bikes sold in the US, saying he would push for a “reciprocal tax” against countries, including US allies, that levy tariffs on American prod- ucts. “It is important that India make greater efforts to lower barriers to trade, including tariff and non-tariff barriers, which will lower prices to consumers, promote development of value chains in India,” said the State Department spokesperson, referring to Trump’s comments on bikes.
The US Congress has been pushing over the past year for greater pressure on India to dismantle economic barriers, and now House Republicans have raised the issue of the new round of duties with New Delhi.
“We conveyed our concerns to the Indian government last week to raising tariffs above WTO rates—especially as it relates to information technology,” a Republican aide in Washington told Reuters.
India announced higher import tax on electronics products such as mobile phones and television sets in December, and then on 40 more items in the budget this month.