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USIBC comes out with comprehensive wish list

Updated: Mar 19, 2014 04:51:16pm
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New Delhi, Mar 19 (KNN) Ahead of the general elections this year, the US-India Business Council (USIBC) has come out with a comprehensive wish list, which if implemented, would help in achieving the goal of bilateral trade worth USD 500 billion per year.

Some of the demands are:  supporting India’s membership in the multilateral export; support for lower tariffs in a range of key components and products that will deepen collaboration between American companies and their Indian counterparts; increasing foreign direct investment cap etc.

The USIBC calls for legislation and implementation of the plan that provides certainty in India’s international tax treaties and investment structures.

Reiterating its call to opening of India’s multi-brand retail sector to support closer linkages between farmers and markets, the USIBC said it would advocate for a fair, transparent and streamlined bidding process in the infrastructure sector.

“Derived from USIBC’s 300 member-companies, both Indian and American, including 250 of the largest US companies investing in India, this ‘Way Forward  Agenda 2014-2015′ presents the many issues we all need to focus on to deepen the two-way partnership between our dynamic commercial sectors,” USIBC president Ron Somers said.

“The facts are that as two-way trade between our economies deepens (now at USD 100 billion, setting a ‘stretch-goal of achieving USD 500 billion before the decade is out), the issues are becoming more granular and complex…but now enjoy a momentum destined to deepen collaboration. That’s the exciting narrative of the US-India growth story,” Somers said.

Increasing foreign direct investment cap from 26 per cent to 74 per cent would spur greater investment and technology transfer by American defence companies, which would increase opportunities for coproduction, joint manufacturing, and industrial partnerships with Indian industry, the USIBC said.

It also urged India to sign long-pending “enabler agreements” and strengthen membership in multilateral export control regimes to enable a more advanced and robust bilateral defence trade relationship.

In its document, running into 40 pages, USIBC said this year it would work with the Indian government to ensure successful alignment with industry best practices when implementing the Compulsory Registration Order or the safety testing, registration, and labelling requirements.

“We will also continue to seek exemptions for highly specialised equipment and R&D products with low commercial value. Also, we will continue to seek flexibility on the labelling requirements from the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) while urging GOI to ensure proper coordination between all branches of the government (i.e., customs and BIS) to ensure accountability and mitigate supply chain disruptions for USIBC companies,” it said.

Urging India to embrace the multi-stakeholder Internet governance model that drives competitiveness and innovation as well as economic and social growth, USIBC said it would engage with New Delhi to liberalise e-commerce in the country by lifting the FDI restrictions and providing national-level treatment, rather than applying state-level conditions, to all e-commerce retail merchants.

It also plans to press on India to implement policies that promote freedom of expression online and to resist placing inappropriate burdens on Internet companies with the intention of blocking content without due-process procedures.

Coming out in support of a strong national manufacturing policy that creates a stable business climate encouraging of US investment in India, USIBC said it will petition for lower tariffs in a range of key components and products that will deepen collaboration between American companies and their Indian counterparts, including current duties on heavy equipment and machinery, gas turbines, and chemicals.

It supports full implementation of India’s Infrastructure Debt Fund, ensuring its success as an effective financial vehicle that mobilises investment into India’s infrastructure sector.

Advocating for the entry and establishment of US law firms in India, USIBC said it will “vigilantly resist” compulsory licensing, acknowledging that measures designed to allow government intervention should be for emergency situations only.

Resisting policy backsliding and protectionism in FDI in pharmaceuticals by advocating against the inclusion of noncompetition agreements in brownfield investments, USIBC said such measures would send a chilling signal to investors, chase capital to other markets, and negatively impact the valuation and ability for domestic companies to grow and collaborate.

The USIBC said it will encourage India to pass legislation creating a separate regulatory framework for medical devices. (KNN/SD)
 

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