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regular-article-logo Tuesday, 30 April 2024

Australia pact today

Morrison and Prime Minister Narendra Modi will witness the signing of the interim agreement, and both countries would continue to work towards a full free trade deal

Reuters Sydney Published 02.04.22, 04:11 AM
Scott Morrison and Narendra Modi.

Scott Morrison and Narendra Modi. File photo.

Australia will sign a trade agreement with India on Saturday that will eliminate tariffs on 85 per cent of Australian goods entering India, helping farmers and miners to diversify export markets, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said.

The Australia-India Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement will be signed

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on Saturday in a virtual ceremony by trade minister Dan Tehan and India’s minister of commerce and industry, Piyush Goyal, Australia said in a statement on Friday night.

Morrison and Prime Minister Narendra Modi will witness the signing of the interim agreement, and both countries would continue to work towards a full free trade deal.

Morrison is expected to call a national election within days, and wanted to secure the trade deal with India, a decade after negotiations between the two countries began, before the election campaign.

His government has pushed to diversify export markets to reduce Australia’s reliance on its largest trading partner China, after diplomatic disputes resulted in Beijing sanctioning Australian products, including wine, lobster and coal. The deal with India unlocks a market of almost 1.4 billion consumers and would strengthen Australia’s economy, he said.

“This agreement opens a big door into the world’s fastest growing major economy for Australian farmers, manufacturers, producers and so many more,” Morrison said in a statement.

Tariffs will be eliminated on more than 85 per cent of Australian goods exports to India, worth A$12.6 billion, rising to almost 91 per cent over 10 years.

Under the agreement, 96 per cent of Indian goods imports will enter Australia duty-free. Tariffs will be eliminated on fresh Australian rock lobster, sheep meat, wool, copper, coal, alumina, and certain critical minerals and certain non-ferrous metals to India.

In a boost for Australia’s wine industry, tariffs will be reduced from 150 per cent to 50 per cent over 10 years for bottles valued over US$5, and reduced to 25 per cent in the same period for bottles valued over US$15. Tariffs of 30 per cent on Australian agricultural produce, including avocados, beans, nuts, and berries will be eliminated over seven years.

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