Deepening US-India trade relations
Combating protectionism
Trade with India represents a big prize for
the United States because of the size and strength of the Indian economy, but
there are still challenges for US companies doing business in India.
The United States can address these challenges by adopting a multi-pronged
strategy for solving trade conflicts and maximizing the underlying potential of
the bilateral trade relationship.
The Indian economy's figures are convincing. India has had 30 years of 6.5 per
cent growth, and 8.5 per cent growth in the last decade. In 2012, the Indian
economy became the third largest (measured in purchasing power parity dollars),
surpassing Japan and now only behind China and the United States. Its trade in goods
and services is worth about US$1 billion. Its US$4.7 trillion economy is
forecast to double every 7–10 years and its US$1 trillion dollar trade figure
is forecast to double every seven years. India will need an investment of over
US$1 trillion in infrastructure, natural gas and services, and in all of these
areas the United States has a comparative advantage as a supplier.
In the last decade, US exports of goods to India increased by around 700 per
cent. Exports of services have doubled in the last four years, US FDI has
increased from US$200 million to US$6 billion, and US–India trade is balanced
trade. This minimizes the scope for macroeconomic and currency-related tensions
that the United States has experienced with other countries.
India has had recent macroeconomic troubles but it is still opening up to the
outside world. FDI regulation has been dramatically liberalized, and
foreign financial investors now have much greater access to Indian equities,
corporate and government bonds, and debt and foreign exchange. These changes
are the result of a bipartisan domestic consensus that there are no
alternatives to openness and globalization.
But US businesses still face three challenges.
First, sectoral protectionism in India has resurfaced
through localisation. This protectionism favors domestic providers of inputs
and equipment over foreign providers. It is a result of India's desire to
create a manufacturing base for robust employment. Protectionism is not the
best policy to achieve this goal, but it is politically difficult to implement
better policies in this area. Moreover, India has caught the Chinese bug — it
is inducing foreign investors to indigenize and localize.
Second, India has a weak and uncertain regulatory and tax environment
that affects the civil nuclear industry, infrastructure, pharmaceuticals and,
more broadly, foreign multinationals.
Third, American firms looking to invest in India face an implicit but
substantial disadvantage. India has signed (or is about to sign) free trade and economic partnership agreements
with its largest trading partners, which are all major competitors to the
United States: Europe, Japan, Singapore, ASEAN and possibly ASEAN+6 and Canada.
Soon, if not already, this discrimination may be the biggest challenge for US
business. Because India's barriers are high and the market is large and
growing, this disadvantage to American companies could be substantial.
The United States can address these challenges by adopting three tactics.
First, the United States should use the WTO for resolving conflict. This is
especially true in cases where Indian policies are out of line with global
norms, and there is no better way of assessing their claims than getting
independent adjudication. The WTO is a particularly effective tool because
India has an excellent record of compliance with WTO rulings against it. For
example, after a US-initiated WTO dispute panel found that India's broad
quantitative restrictions on consumer goods violated WTO rules, India launched
one of its most sweeping trade reforms.
Second, US business must adapt to the Indian environment. India's regulatory
environment needs to improve substantially, but this will not happen any time
soon. US business must learn to navigate an Indian market where there will be
some irreducible messiness on rule of law and legal certainty. If it does not,
it risks losing out to firms from other countries in what is one of the world's
largest and most dynamic markets.
Third, there needs to be a broad and strategic framework for US–India trade
relations. This kind of framework will address the small problems, as well as
the big ones. A broad and strategic framework is necessary because of the deep
commonality between the two great democracies. It can reverse the disadvantage
that each country is inflicting on the other. The US–India relationship also
has a key role to play in revitalizing the multilateral trading system by
moving beyond a Doha Round to a possible China Round. This would be a way of
keeping China tethered to the multilateral system that has served the world so
well.
There is a lot of potential to deepen US–India trade relations. The United
States can meet the challenges it faces in India by taking a strategic approach
to solving the problems which still remain.
(Arvind Subramanian is Senior Fellow at the Peterson
Institute for International Economics and Senior Fellow at the Center for Global
Development. This was made available to Asia Sentinel by the East Asia
Forum.)
Great point you make there. good article.. I like your perspective on this subject.
ReplyDeletemaximize potential | natural leadership