India snubs Asian trade pact
Bangkok - India said Monday it would not join a sprawling Asian trade pact, raising fears over how domestic producers would be hit, in a major blow to the Beijing-backed deal.
The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) was meant to account for 30% of global GDP and loop in half of the world's people.
But India dug in over concerns about market access, fearing its domestic industries would be hard hit if the country was flooded by cheap Made-in-China goods.
"Our decision was guided by the impact this agreement will have on the ordinary human beings of India and livelihood of people, including the poorest of the poor," Vijay Thakur Singh, a senior diplomat in charge of East Asia for India's ministry of external affairs, said.
The dramatic pullout comes after frenzied negotiations at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit in Bangkok, which closed Monday evening.
The meeting was dominated by trade issues - with RCEP front and centre - backlit by the crippling US-China tariff war threatening to drag global growth.
The decision is major blow to the deal, which intended to loop in all 10 ASEAN states plus China, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand - notably excluding the US.
Remaining members said they were aiming to sign the deal next year, after legal review of the draft terms of the text agreed Monday.
‘Gruelling negotiations’
The news came after a full day of meetings at the ASEAN summit in Bangkok, attended by the leaders of Japan, South Korea, and India, along with China's premier.
Notably absent was a top US official after Washington sent commerce secretary Wilbur Ross and national security advisor Robert O'Brien in lieu of president Donald Trump.
The decision raised diplomatic eyebrows in Bangkok and appeared to prompt several Southeast Asian leaders to skip a meeting with US officials on Monday.
India's decision dashed hopes of closing the RCEP deal at the summit after seven years of gruelling negotiations.
A senior trade diplomat with knowledge of the negotiations said prime minister Narendra Modi did not budge because he was under domestic pressure.
But the diplomat held out the option that India could join at a "later date" even after it is signed, if outstanding issues are resolved.
China's deputy foreign minister Le Yucheng echoed that view.
"Whenever India is ready, it is welcome to get on board," he said before New Delhi confirmed its pullout. – Nampa/AFP
The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) was meant to account for 30% of global GDP and loop in half of the world's people.
But India dug in over concerns about market access, fearing its domestic industries would be hard hit if the country was flooded by cheap Made-in-China goods.
"Our decision was guided by the impact this agreement will have on the ordinary human beings of India and livelihood of people, including the poorest of the poor," Vijay Thakur Singh, a senior diplomat in charge of East Asia for India's ministry of external affairs, said.
The dramatic pullout comes after frenzied negotiations at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit in Bangkok, which closed Monday evening.
The meeting was dominated by trade issues - with RCEP front and centre - backlit by the crippling US-China tariff war threatening to drag global growth.
The decision is major blow to the deal, which intended to loop in all 10 ASEAN states plus China, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand - notably excluding the US.
Remaining members said they were aiming to sign the deal next year, after legal review of the draft terms of the text agreed Monday.
‘Gruelling negotiations’
The news came after a full day of meetings at the ASEAN summit in Bangkok, attended by the leaders of Japan, South Korea, and India, along with China's premier.
Notably absent was a top US official after Washington sent commerce secretary Wilbur Ross and national security advisor Robert O'Brien in lieu of president Donald Trump.
The decision raised diplomatic eyebrows in Bangkok and appeared to prompt several Southeast Asian leaders to skip a meeting with US officials on Monday.
India's decision dashed hopes of closing the RCEP deal at the summit after seven years of gruelling negotiations.
A senior trade diplomat with knowledge of the negotiations said prime minister Narendra Modi did not budge because he was under domestic pressure.
But the diplomat held out the option that India could join at a "later date" even after it is signed, if outstanding issues are resolved.
China's deputy foreign minister Le Yucheng echoed that view.
"Whenever India is ready, it is welcome to get on board," he said before New Delhi confirmed its pullout. – Nampa/AFP
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