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Top official of India says India will not send out protectionist signals in trade

The top bureaucrat at the Finance Ministry said that India did not want to send a message of protectionism, following the lowering of import duties on motorcycles with high value, in response to the tariffs imposed by U.S. president Donald Trump.

Trump's comments on Sunday came just a day before he ignited a global trade war by imposing tariffs against Canada, Mexico and China. None of them were directed at India, despite the fact that Trump called it a "tariff abuser" during his campaign for president last year.

In an interview conducted after the budget was unveiled, Finance Secretary Tuhin Kanta Pandey said: "We do not want to send any signals that we are protectionist."

"We don't want more protection," is our stance.

When Prime Minister Narendra modi meets with Trump this month, trade and immigration issues will be at the forefront. India is trying to appease Trump after his claims that India's tariffs are hurting American companies.

Pandey said that India's budget reduced import tariff slabs. The average basic customs duty on a number of items, such as raw materials used in domestic industries, like textiles and cars, was also reduced.

He said that the average import tariffs for essential goods (mainly food and raw materials) range between zero and five percent, while capital goods are taxed at 7.5% to 10 percent. About ten items fall into higher tax categories.

Despite the fact that trade analysts did not believe that the reductions were enough,

"India's average duties are still higher than the United States of America, Japan, and China," Ajay Srivastava said, founder of Global Trade Research Initiative in Delhi, a think-tank.

India is reducing the peak rates for basic customs duties that are used to compare with other countries, but it has added various surcharges. This means that India's total tax burden remains high.

Trump's administration raised the issue of Indians who are living undocumented in the United States. The Indian foreign ministry said that it was in discussion with U.S. authorities on this topic.

India reduced custom duties for motorcycles with engines of 1,600cc and more to 30% in the budget from 50%.

"We should send the right message to the world as well as our own industry," Pandey said, adding that the tariff measures initially aimed to help domestic companies but would be phased-out as these industries developed. (Reporting and editing by Nikunj Ohri, Manoj Kumar; Clarence Fernandez).

(source: Reuters)