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						Slow train to China: India's trade ties with Beijing 
						taking time to ripen
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		 [December 06, 2018]   
		By Neha Dasgupta and Mayank Bhardwaj 
 NEW DELHI (Reuters) - China and India may 
		be talking about improving their trade relationship but there is little 
		action to go with the words.
 
 According to Indian government officials and representatives of various 
		Indian trade bodies, progress is very slow - and may even be getting 
		slower after last weekend's truce between the United States and China in 
		their trade war.
 
 Both India and China have sought to rebuild trust after a armed standoff 
		over a stretch of the Himalayan border last year.
 
 Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping 
		have met a number of times this year to give impetus to the trade 
		discussions. The latest was last week, when they met on the sidelines of 
		the G20 meeting in Argentina.
 
 Indian and Chinese officials said after that meeting there was talk of 
		Beijing increasing its soymeal, rapeseed meal, rice and sugar imports 
		from India, while China would push for more Chinese exports of dairy 
		products, apples and pears to India.
 
 India is also keen to increase its exports of drugs to China.
 
		
		 
		
 In reality, though, getting such exchanges turned into deals is going to 
		be a laborious process.
 
 "When we say the Chinese are receptive, it means the talks are 
		happening, but it's going slow," said one senior Indian government 
		official with direct knowledge of the discussions. "It can be termed as 
		progress because just a few months ago, we weren't even talking," said 
		the official, who did not wish to be named because he is not authorized 
		to talk to media.
 
 The Chinese commerce ministry did not respond to a faxed request for 
		comment for this article.
 
 Bilateral trade between China and India touched $89.71 billion in the 
		year ending March 2018, with the trade deficit widening to $63.05 
		billion in China's favor, more than a nine-fold increase over the past 
		decade.
 
 The Indian government is very keen to reduce that gap. A recent study 
		commissioned by India's trade ministry and reviewed by Reuters, said: 
		"There is no bilateral trade relationship of greater economic and 
		political significance for India than with China."
 
 The reduction in trade tensions between Washington and Beijing, which 
		has led to a delay in the imposition of larger punitive tariffs by the 
		United States pending further trade talks over a 90-day period, means 
		that the Chinese government may not feel the need to speed up its 
		discussions with New Delhi, Indian officials said.
 
 
		
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			 Chinese President Xi 
			Jinping shakes hands with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi during 
			the G20 Summit in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, China September 4, 
			2016. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj/File Photo 
            
			 
The government has received calls from jittery exporters who want to know 
whether the improvement in the relationship between China and the United States 
would make India's position weaker, said the senior Indian government official. 
ROADBLOCK FOR INDIA
 Ajay Sahai, director general of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations, 
also said China's truce with the United States may be a roadblock to improved 
trade with Beijing.
 
 "As it is, the China-U.S. tariff tension was a temporary opportunity and it is 
not correct for companies to base their long-term strategies on it," said Sahai.
 
One longer term impediment to improved trade is product quality, and trade, 
industry and government officials in India said both Beijing and New Delhi could 
take time to iron out their differences.
 Last week, India and China signed an agreement allowing Beijing to inspect 
imports of Indian fish meal and fish oil.
 
 A Chinese trade delegation is coming to India on Dec. 10 to inspect soymeal 
plants, said D.N. Pathak, executive director of the Soybean Processors 
Association of India.
 
 India wants China to drop a years-long ban on soymeal imports from the South 
Asian nation. China was a leading buyer of Indian soymeal, a key ingredient in 
animal feed, until Beijing banned the purchases in late 2011 over quality 
concerns.
 
 In November, India's trade ministry said the country could export up to 2 
million tonnes of sugar, but trade officials said the target was too steep 
because China has already exhausted its import quota for this year.
 
 
 Although India has contracted to sell some tiny shipments of rice to China, 
officials said New Delhi would find it difficult to boost volumes as Beijing has 
traditionally been importing the staple from Vietnam and Thailand and the 
Chinese would take time to develop a taste for Indian rice.
 
 (Reporting by Neha Dasgupta and Mayank Bhardwaj; additional reporting by Ryan 
Woo in Beijing; Editing by Martin Howell and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
 
				 
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