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The Economic Times
The Economic Times

India may rethink Scotch whisky tariff cuts if UK does not ease steel import curbs

India could ​revisit tariff concessions offered to ​Britain on products such as Scotch whisky if London fails ​to address New Delhi's concerns over its steel safeguard measures, an Indian official said on Monday ahead of fresh bilateral trade talks.

The India-UK free trade deal, signed in May last ‌year and expected ⁠to ⁠take effect this year, has run into hurdles after Britain proposed stricter safeguards on steel imports ​to protect its domestic industry.

Also Read: UK Business Secretary Peter Kyle to meet Piyush Goyal on June 2 over India-UK FTA rollout

"So now the ball is in their (UK) court," an Indian trade ​official told reporters on Monday. "If they do not leverage their free trade agreement, we can always reconsider the concessions we offered."

Britain's Trade Secretary Peter Kyle is ​due in India for talks with Commerce Minister ⁠Piyush Goyal ‌on Tuesday.

Under the trade pact, India agreed to cut tariffs ​on Scotch ​whisky from 150% to 75% initially and further to 40% ⁠over 10 years.

The deal envisages tariff reductions by both ​sides on a range of goods, from textiles to ​whisky and cars, while expanding market access for businesses in the world's fifth- and sixth-largest economies.

The two countries expect the agreement to boost bilateral trade by an additional 25.5 billion pounds ($34 billion) by 2040.

India has objected to Britain's steel safeguard measures, arguing they could restrict market access for Indian exports. ‌The dispute centres on tariff-free quotas and higher duties on some steel shipments, creating fresh uncertainty for Indian exporters even as ​both sides work ​to implement the ⁠trade pact, officials said.

India, along with Brazil, Turkey, Japan, South Korea, Switzerland and Australia, has raised concerns at the World Trade Organization over Britain's new restrictions on ​tariff-free steel imports.

Britain has also proposed imposing carbon-related border measures from January 1, 2027, covering imports of products such as iron and steel, aluminium, cement and fertilisers as part of its efforts to reduce carbon emissions.

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