India says it has not committed to
slashing import duties on US products, days after President Donald Trump
announced that New Delhi had agreed to “cut their tariffs way down”. Only weeks
into his second term, Trump has upended global trade, targeting friends and
foes alike.
He has also blamed all trading partners
of “unfair” practices, and has announced reciprocal tariffs on many countries,
including India, to begin from next month. Trump once again railed at India’s
“massive tariffs” last week. “You can’t sell anything into India, it is almost
restrictive,” Trump said.
“They have agreed, by the way, they
want to cut their tariffs way down now because somebody is finally exposing
them for what they have done,” he added. But the Indian government told a
parliamentary panel that “no commitments had been made to the US on the issue,”
a report in The Times of India newspaper said Tuesday.
The government “has sought time until
September to address the issue that is being repeatedly flagged by the American
president,” it added. India’s commerce secretary Sunil Barthwal “said that
India and the US were working towards a mutually beneficial bilateral trade
agreement, focusing on long-term trade cooperation instead of merely seeking
immediate tariffs adjustments”.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who
visited the White House last month, has an acknowledged rapport with Trump, who
said he shares a “special bond” with the Indian leader.
Modi said the world’s
largest and fifth-largest economies would work on a “mutually beneficial trade
agreement” to be sealed “very soon”.
While the United States is a crucial
market for India’s information technology and services sectors, Washington has
made billions of dollars in new military hardware sales to New Delhi in recent
years. Trump could visit India later this year for a summit of heads of state
from the Quad -- a four-way grouping of Australia, India, Japan and the United
States.