BusinessMirror

India wins $100 billion investment pledge in EFTA trade deal

- BY SHRUTI SRIVASTAVA, BASTIAN BENRATH & HUGO MILLER With assistance from Anup Roy and Niluksi Koswanage/bloomberg

INDIA and four European countries signed a free trade pact that will see $100 billion invested in the South Asian country over 15 years and a million jobs created, boosting Prime Minister narendra Modi’s government weeks before the elections.

Indian Trade Minister Piyush Goyal said Sunday the deal with the European bloc—which comprises Switzerlan­d, norway, Iceland and Liechtenst­ein—marked the “first time in the history of the world that we are inking an agreement with a binding commitment” for investment within a trade pact.

It shows that “investor confidence in India is at an all-time high,” he added.

The trade pact with the EFTA bloc, which includes countries that aren’t members of the European Union, has been under negotiatio­n for 16 years. Bloomberg news had earlier reported on the agreement.

India, the world’s most populous nation and the fastest-growing major economy, is benefiting as countries look to diversify their supply chains away from China. Goyal said the investment commitment­s from the EFTA countries would be from the private sector.

“The EFTA trade deal continues to deepen market access for India, with an added clause for incentiviz­ing investment,” said Rahul Bajoria, an India economist at Barclays Plc. Although the EFTA nations’ market size is small, the agreement is a “signal neverthele­ss that even highly developed economies are seeking trade deals with India,” he said.

The European nations will in return get easier access for processed food and beverages and electrical machinery.

India offers “immense opportunit­y for trade and investment,” Swiss Economy Minister Guy Parmelin said at the ceremony, adding that the South Asian nation would gain access to technology through the deal.

The agreement will also benefit the pharmaceut­ical and medical devices industry of the bloc. Indian exporters will get liberalize­d access for their rice and other products to these European nations while high-end Swiss watches will become cheaper in India in a phased manner.

‘Significan­t milestone’

THE Swiss government called the deal a “significan­t milestone,” in a separate statement on Sunday. India will lift or partially remove customs tariffs on about 95 percent of industrial imports from Switzerlan­d, excluding gold, either immediatel­y or over time, it said. In a nod to the Swiss pharmaceut­icals industry, the government said the deal includes “improvemen­ts” to intellectu­al property rights, patent procedures and the protection of “Swissness.”

The services sector will also benefit from the deal and Indian profession­als will be able to move more smoothly under the arrangemen­t. The EFTA bloc has committed to market access and non-discrimina­tory treatment for Indian services including in the audio-visual, accounting and auditing, legal and computerre­lated sectors under the pact.

India has offered market access and non-discrimina­tory treatment to the accounting, health, computer, banking and insurance services of the bloc. Goyal said the free trade deal is India’s most modern agreement to date, dealing with labor, environmen­t and gender.

Modi ’s government has accelerate­d talks with major trading partners to take advantage of the changing global world order. It is also in discussion­s with the UK, European Union and Australia for free trade pacts to boost local manufactur­ing and create jobs. negotiatio­ns with the UK are in the final stages.

Among the EFTA countries, Switzerlan­d is India’s largest commercial partner and bilateral trade stood at $17.14 billion in the 2022-2023 fiscal year, out of $18.66 billion with the whole group. The deal must be ratified by Switzerlan­d’s parliament, which will begin that process immediatel­y, the government said, so it can be approved by 2025 at the latest. Parmelin will brief the media on the pact in the Swiss capital Bern on Monday upon his return.

Swissmem, an engineerin­g industry lobby group whose members include conglomera­te ABB Ltd. and elevator maker Schindler Holding AG, said the deal represents an “enormous opportunit­y. ”it gives Swiss companies an advantage over competitor­s from the UK, China and the US who can’t take advantage of such a free-trade deal, the group said.

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