NEW DELHI :
INDIA has asserted that trade issues with the US should be resolved through bilateral trade negotiations rather than unilateral measures, urging the USTR to reconsider its proposed 12.5 per cent tariff, citing inconsistencies in its Section 301 investigation into forced labour concerns.
Participating in the public hearing, Joint Secretary in Department of Commerce Brij Mohan Mishra submitted that in light of India’s genuine engagement on forced labour issues, it strongly expresses its concerns at the USTR’s (US Trade Representative) determination.
India takes the elimination of forced labour seriously as a constitutional obligation, and as a matter of international law and principle. “India would like to highlight its concerns with the USTR’s report and findings against India,” he said.
The USTR has not satisfied the relevant legal standards under Section 301(d) of the Trade Act.
A mere absence of a forced labour import prohibition without evidentiary basis of
other statutory requirements cannot be construed as unreasonable under Section 301, he added. The USTR determination does not provide a rationale for countrywide tariffs and impermissibly clubs 46 economies (including India) into a single category, according to the written transcript of the hearing, held on July 8 and published on the USTR website. The USTR’s Section 301 investigation report concerns the failure to impose and effectively enforce a prohibition on the importation of goods produced with forced labour. India has stated that the adopted methodology is particularly flawed as the determination is based on case studies of a handful of economies and relied on broad trade patterns.
The report, he said, relies on broad data and it presupposes that an economy’s imports flagged for this stuff involving imports made with forced labour are exported to the US without providing any sector- or country-specific evidence and actual linkages with forced labour.
In relation to India, there is inadequate and insufficient evidence that lack of forced labour import ban causes an unfair competitive advantage to the detriment of the American industry, he said.
“In conclusion, it is submitted that the USTR reconsider the imposition of tariff in light of the identified inconsistencies in the report in the Federal Register notice. We ask any trade problems be addressed within the framework of the India-US bilateral trade negotiation, not through unilateral measures such as this investigation,” he added.
India remains willing to engage constructively with the USTR through consultation and dialogue on any specific concern. It is important to note that India’s imports of rice are very small and that caters to targeted demands of specific and niche rice varieties.