India Formally Signs Trade in Services and Trade in Investments Agreement
with ASEAN
India has formally signed the
Trade in Services & Trade in Investments Agreement with ASEAN. The Services
Agreement will open up opportunities of movement of both manpower and
investments from either side between India and ASEAN. Nine out of ten ASEAN
countries have signed the same. Philippines is
completing its domestic procedure and it is expected to sign soon. It may be
mentioned that India-ASEAN Agreement on Trade in Goods was signed in 2009 and became
effective from 2010. The Trade Agreement has boosted the total trade between
India and ASEAN substantially in the past four years.
It may be noted that this
Agreement on Services & Investment was scheduled to be signed in Nay Pay
Taw, Myanmar, during the ASEAN Economic Ministers (AEM) meeting on 26th August,
2014. However, in view of the launch of Prime Minister’s Jandhan
Yogana for inclusive banking, the Minister of State
(Independent Charge) Commerce and Industry Smt. Nirmala
Sitharaman (who was in-charge of the launch of the
scheme) could not attend the AEM. She, however, deputed the senior officers
from the Ministry of Commerce who attended all the important meetings and
consultations on her behalf.
The Minister reiterated the
deep historical, cultural and economic ties with ASEAN-India values its
economic partnership with ASEAN. The signing of the agreement in Services &
Investment is reflective of India’s deep commitment to have a strong institutional
architecture for economic ties with ASEAN. As part of this economic vision,
India is also part of the RCEP negotiations which presently being discussed
between ASEAN and its six partner countries.
Key features of the Trade in
Services Agreement:
• The Trade
in Services Agreement with the ASEAN contains all features of a modern and
comprehensive agreement on Services and is in line with the other bilateral
agreements that India has signed so far. Some of the important Articles
contained in the Agreement are ones on transparency, domestic regulations,
recognition, market access, national treatment,
increasing participation of developing countries, joint committee on services,
review, dispute settlement and denial of benefits.
• Both
India and ASEAN Member States have taken GATS plus commitments in various
Services and modes of supply. Each ASEAN Member State has tabled individual
schedule of commitments which are equally applicable for India and other ASEAN
Member States. India on the other hand has tabled three schedules of
commitments one for Philippines, one for Indonesia and one for the remaining
eight ASEAN Member States. It was also agreed by India that in order to
increase participation of the least developed countries no additional requests
would be tabled to the CLMV countries (Cambodia, Lao, Myanmar and Vietnam). All
the three schedules tabled by India are well within the existing autonomous
regime of India.
• A brief
annex on Movement of Natural persons (one of the key areas of interest for
India) has been included in the Agreement. This Annex defines Business
Visitors, Intra Corporate Transferees (Managers, Executives and Specialists)
and Contractual Service Suppliers. This will help provide commercially
meaningful market across in ASEAN for our professionals, including those from
the IT/ITeS sector. Independent professionals have
not been defined in the Annex.