Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Joining RCEP would have hurt India's interests, says Piyush Goyal 


Being the basic framework of the RCEP deal, the FTA with the 10-nation grouping came into effect in 2010.


BS : Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal told Parliament on Tuesday that Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) deal was harmful for India’s interests, hinting that the country might not join the grouping any time soon.

Goyal said he had opposed the deal even before talks had ended. He said he was a proud member of the RSS-affiliated Swadeshi Jagran Manch, and that the traders’ body had remained steadfast in his opposition to the RCEP.

It’s funny that some leapt into the RCEP debate only after news of India’s not joining the bloc leaked,” the minister said.

He argued the Congress regime should have hit pause button on RCEP, seeing that India’s trade deficit with other countries were rising to unsustainable limits.

We continued talks since India had been discussing the issue for a long time,” Goyal said. But he insisted India would continue speaking to all other nations on trade, provided it gets reciprocal benefits.

However, Opposition members questioned the government’s sudden change in stance on the deal.

Goyal, however, maintained that the final decision had been taken after intensive discussions with stakeholders. He said that other RCEP nations could slowly see how India was moving away from the signing table as New Delhi continued to raise objections to 'unfair treatment'.

Ramesh was joined by erstwhile Commerce Minister Anand Sharma pointed out that backing out of RCEP can affect the import of essential goods like palm oil, gold and pulses from partner nations.

He added that the pullout would affect India's strategic interests in South East Asia.
Over the past few months, the government has upped the ante against the previous United Progressive Alliance regime, bashing it for compromising India's trade interests. The government had also remained cautious on not repeating a deal similar to India's Free Trade Agreement with the Association of the Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) bloc, which is the earliest FTA signed by the country. India's revenue foregone due to New Delhi's first major multilateral deal has more than doubled to nearly Rs 26,000 crore in 2018-19.

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