The 12 countries Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the US and Vietnam constitute 40 per cent of the global economy
WASHINGTON:
As the US and 11 other nations reached a landmark deal on the Trans-Pacific
Partnership which aims to become the world's largest free-trade zone linking 40
per cent of the global economy, a top US industry advocacy has argued for
India's integration into global trade pacts.
"For
India to reach its ambiguous economic growth targets, it needs to be integrated
into global trade pacts, especially those that drive commerce in the
dynamic Asia Pacific region," Mukesh Aghi, president ofUS India Business Council ( USIBC) told
PTI after the deal on TPP was announced by the US and 11 other countries
yesterday.
The 12
countries Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New
Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the US and Vietnam constitute 40 per cent of the
global economy.
"India's
exploration of APEC membership, which is currently an informal precursor to TPP
membership can unlock India's potential as a global manufacturing hub and
deepen its ties with the global economy," Aghi said
In fact
USIBC's outgoing Chairman Ajay Banga of MasterCard has been strongly arguing in
favor of India joining TPP.
"APEC
membership would help prepare India to participate in the emerging megaregional
trade arrangements, such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and the Free
Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific (FTAAP) that will define the future of global
trade," Banga and the former Australian Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, wrote
in The Wall Street Journal in July.
Aghi said
recent study by the Peterson Institute for International Economics demonstrates
that if India were to complete its domestic reforms and join an ambitious TPP
agreement that included all of the APEC countries, it could potentially expand
exports by more than USD 500 billion per year.
"On
the other hand, if it were to stand outside the negotiations, while other
countries entered a regional trade agreement, the Peterson study forecasts
export losses of USD 50 billion per year, as trade is diverted away from
India," Aghi said.
However
Indian officials argue that India is not left out of such international trading
agreements.
In
Washington last month, the Commerce Minister Nirmala Sitharaman refuted that
India is being left
out.
"If
you looking at India being left out. That's not really true," she told a
Washington audience when asked about India not being part of the Trans-Pacific
Partnership, of which India is not a part.
"We
are very actively engaged in ARSEP (Asean Regional Comprehensive Economic
Partnership) which consists of ASEAN and ASEAN
FTA countries.
So we
actually in ARSEP are moving faster along with other members," Sitharaman
said during a panel discussion on India-US economic ties organised by the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a top American think tank.
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