India Out of RCEP for the Time Being
We, the Heads of State/Government of the Member States
of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and Australia, China, India,
Japan, Korea, and New Zealand, gathered on 4 November 2019 In Bangkok, Thailand,
on the occasion of the 3rd RCEP Summit.
We recalled our
Joint Declaration on the Launch of Negotiations for the RCEP issued in Phnom Penh,
Cambodia, In 2012, as well as the Guiding Principles and Objectives for Negotiating
the RCEP that we endorsed, in which we committed to achieve a modern, comprehensive,
high-quality, and mutually beneficial
economic partnership agreement.
Against the backdrop of a fast-changing global environment,
the completion of the RCEP negotiations will demonstrate our collective commitment
to an open trade and investment environment across the region. We are negotiating
an Agreement intended to further expand and deepen regional value chains for the
benefits of our businesses, including small and medium enterprises, as well as our
workers, producers, and consumers. RCEP will significantly boost the region's future
growth prospects and contribute positively to the global economy, while serving
as a supporting pillar to a strong multilateral trading system and promoting development
in economies across the region.
We welcomed the report presented by Ministers on
the outcomes of the RCEP negotiations, which commenced in 2013.
We noted 15 RCEP Participating Countries have concluded
text-based negotiations for all 20 chapters1 and
essentially all their market access Issues; and tasked legal scrubbing by them to
commence for signing in 2020.
India has significant outstanding issues, which remain
unresolved. All RCEP Participating Countries will work together to resolve these
outstanding issues in a mutually satisfactory way. India's final decision will depend
on satisfactory resolution of these issues.
1Chapters on: 1) Initial Provisions
and General Definitions; 2) Trade in Goods; 3) Rules of Origin, including Annex
on Product Specific Rules; 4) Customs Procedures and Trade Facilitation; 5) Sanitary
and Phytosanitary Measures; 6) Standards, Technical Regulations
and Conformity Assessment Procedures; 7) Trade Remedies; 8) Trade in Services, including
Annexes on Financial Services, Telecommunication Services, and Professional Services;
9) Movement of Natural Persons; 10) Investment; 11) Intellectual Property; 12) Electronic
Commerce; 13)
Competition; 14) Small
and Medium Enterprises; 15) Economic and Technical Cooperation; 16) Government Procurement;
17) General Provisions and Exceptions;18) Institutional Provisions; 19) Dispute
Settlement; and 20) Final Provisions.