Melbourne: India and Australia signed a wide-ranging economic pact on Saturday, cutting duties on more than 85 per cent of goods exported to the South Asian nation, as both governments secure alternative supply chains and counter an assertive China.
“This agreement opens a big door into the world’s fastest growing major economy for Australian farmers, manufacturers, producers and so many more,” the Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said in a statement.
The free trade deal is expected to help India forge deeper ties with the raw-material rich nation as it seeks to become a manufacturing hub to revive the pandemic-hit economy. For Australia, the agreement opens doors to a market of over 1.4 billion people, as Canberra grapples with China’s trade curbs on a range of commodities exports.
The signing of the pact comes ahead of a national election campaign in Australia, with Morrison’s center-right government pushing a narrative of strong economic management as it struggles to make up ground in opinion polls. Speaking at the virtual signing ceremony Australian Trade Minister Dan Tehan said the agreement “will underpin the economic stability of the Indo-Pacific.”
This is the second major trade agreement that the Modi government has signed so far after sealing a similar deal with the UAE earlier this year.
Trade Minister Piyush Goyal said India expects bilateral trade between the two countries to almost double from from existing $27 billion to up to $50 billion over the next five years. “There is huge potential in areas like textiles, pharmaceuticals, hospitality, gem and jewelery and IT among others,” Goyal said.
Adequate safeguards have been provided for business persons in both countries, he said.
Australia is among India’s top 15 trading partners, according to Indian government data. The pact, that’s been almost a decade in the making, will give greater market access and slash duties on a range of goods including, sheep meat, wool, wine, coal, alumina and metallic ores, sold by Australia in India.
India has also agreed to reduce duties on Australian wine. Tariffs on shipments with a minimum import price of $5 per bottle will be reduced to 100 per cent from 150 per cent while duty on bottles costing $15 is being slashed to 75 per cent.