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India and UK Free Trade Agreement: Key Facts

India and UK Free Trade Agreement: Key Facts

After three years of negotiation, Britain and India will sign a formal free trade agreement during the visit by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to the UK on Thursday. After three years of negotiations, the British Parliament and India's Federal Cabinet will need to approve the deal. This is likely to happen within a year.

The following are the main points of the Agreement:

Tariff Cuts

India reduces tariffs on almost 90% of UK products

Whisky and Gin levy will fall from 150% down to 75% then to 40% within a decade

Tariffs on automobiles to drop from 100% plus to 10% under quota

Other goods, such as cosmetics, medical equipment, salmon, chocolates and biscuits, will be subject to a reduction in tariffs

According to the Indian Commerce Ministry, UK will offer duty-free entry to nearly 100% of Indian items

BENEFITS TO INDIAN SECTORS

Indian exports like textiles, footwear and gems & jewelry, furniture, auto parts, chemicals, machinery, sporting goods, and other items are likely to be duty-free, compared to the current UK levels of between 4%-16%.

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According to the Indian commerce ministry, UK will grant temporary access to visitors, including businessmen and contract service providers, as well as yoga instructors, chefs, and musicians.

Indian workers and their employers working temporarily in Britain will not be required to pay social security contributions for the next three years. This is estimated to save around 40 billion rupees (approximately $463 million) per year.

UK FIRMS TO GET ACCESS TO INDIAN GOVERNMENT PROCUREMENT

India will allow British suppliers to participate in non-sensitive government tenders within the federal government. The threshold is 2 billion rupees.

According to estimates by the UK government, this deal will allow UK companies to access India's public sector procurement market. This market consists of around 40,000 tenders, with an estimated value of 38 billion pounds per year.

BOOSTER TO UK ECONOMY According to British estimates, the trade pact will increase UK GDP in the long-term by 4.8 billion pounds ($6.5billion) per year, as consumers gain access to cheaper Indian clothing, footwear, and food products.

INDIAN FIRMS WILL BENEFIT

Duty-free access to the UK is likely to benefit Indian textile and clothing manufacturers like Welspun India. Arvind Ltd., Raymond. Vardhman.

According to industry analysts, footwear manufacturers such as Bata India and Relaxo, as well automakers like Tata Motors Mahindra Electric, Bharat Forge, could benefit.

UK COMPANIES

Access to the fast-growing Indian markets could be beneficial for UK companies including Diageo, Aston Martin, Jaguar Land Rover and Tata owned Jaguar Land Rover.

(source: Reuters)