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At WTO, India Proposes Retaliatory Duties Against US Aver Auto Tariffs

"The proposed suspension of concessions or other obligations would take the form of an increase in tariffs on selected products originating in the United States," according to a notification of the WTO.

At WTO, India Proposes Retaliatory Duties Against US Aver Auto Tariffs
India has notified the WTO's Council for Trade in Goods of its proposed suspension of concessions.
New Delhi:

India on Friday proposed imposing retaliatory duties under the WTO (World Trade Organisation) norms against the US over American tariffs imports on the country's auto parts in the name of safeguard measures.

"The proposed suspension of concessions or other obligations would take the form of an increase in tariffs on selected products originating in the United States," according to a notification of the WTO being circulated at the request of India.

India has notified the WTO's Council for Trade in Goods of its proposed suspension of concessions and other obligations under certain WTO provisions.

"This notification is made in connection with safeguard measures extended by the United States of America on imports of automobile parts from India," it said.

On March 26 this year, the US adopted a safeguard measure in the form of a tariff increase of 25 per cent ad valorem on imports of passenger vehicles and light trucks, and on certain automobile parts from India.

These measures apply from May 3, 2025 as regards automobile parts, and for an unlimited duration.

The measures have not been notified by the United States to the WTO, but are, in essence, safeguard measures.

India has maintained that the measures taken by the United States are not consistent with the GATT (General Agreement on Trade and Tariff) 1994 and the agreement on Safeguards.

As consultations sought by India on these tariffs have not taken place, "India reserves the right to suspend concessions or other obligations", the WTO notification added.

The safeguard measures would affect USD 2,895 million imports annually into the United States of the relevant products originating in India, on which the duty collection would be USD 723.75 million.

"Accordingly, India's proposed suspension of concessions would result in an equivalent amount of duty collected from products originating in the United States," it said.

To ensure the effective exercise of its right to suspend substantially equivalent concessions or other obligations, the multinational body said, India has reserved its right to adjust the products as well as the tariff rates.

"India reserves the right to withdraw, modify, supplement or replace this notification,and/or make a further notification or notifications as and when required," it added.

The development is important as India and the US are actively negotiating an interim trade agreement to boost trade ties.

India has last month taken similar measures against the US tariffs on steel and aluminium.

Commenting on India's decision to reserve rights, think tank Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI) said India's WTO notification is a legal and strategic step, signalling its readiness to retaliate against the US safeguard duties on automobiles and parts.

By invoking a provision of the WTO's Safeguards Agreement, India is asserting its rights under international trade rules. "The proposed retaliation -- tariff hikes on US goods worth over USD 700 million -- is proportionate to the injury caused. However, whether India will follow through remains uncertain," GTRI Founder Ajay Srivastava said.

He added that in a similar case involving US steel tariffs, India held back.

Given the sensitive timing of the India-US trade deal and broader geopolitical considerations, this may be more of a warning shot than a guaranteed action, he said. 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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