Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Integrating Asia: Japan-India Trade Pact

More signs that Asia continues to deepen her trade ties with each other.

This from the Japan Times

Prime Minister Naoto Kan and visiting Indian leader Manmohan Singh officially agreed Monday in Tokyo to activate an economic partnership agreement as soon as possible and to speed up talks on civilian nuclear cooperation.

The deal to strengthen economic ties between Japan and India, a fast-growing democratic nation with a population of 1.2 billion, comes at a time when Asian nations are becoming increasingly concerned about China's activities in the East China and South China seas….

The two countries will continue working-level preparations for signing the EPA. Tokyo aims to sign it around the end of the year so it can be submitted to the Diet early next year for ratification, Japanese officials said.

Under the EPA, the two countries will abolish a wide range of tariffs on products ranging from car components and electronic goods to bonsai plants. Broader than a free-trade agreement, the EPA is a more comprehensive pact on economic and trade cooperation that also includes promoting investments.

"This is a historic achievement that signals the economic alignment of two of the largest economies in Asia," Singh said. "It will open up new business opportunities and lead to a quantum increase in trade and investment flows between our two countries."

Japan and India began discussing the possibility of a civilian nuclear energy deal in June that would allow Tokyo to export its nuclear power technology to New Delhi. But India is not a signatory member of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, and it is unclear how soon the two nations can conclude a deal, given the strong antinuclear sentiment here…

The EPA will eliminate tariffs on 94 percent of two-way trade in 10 years after the pact takes effect. The tariffs to be abolished include those on Indian exports of car components, DVD players, video cameras, peaches and strawberries to Japan, while Japan would improve access to most industrial products, as well as durian, curry, tea leaves and shrimp.

If there is anything to be bullish about, it is that the direction of geopolitics seems headed towards embracing broader ‘free’ trade.

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