WTO meet builds bridge for Indian professionals
Contractual service providers and professionals may have easier access to EU and US if the two translate the signals at the WTO into serious offers. Get your dream job
While the EU proposed replacing the restrictive regime of economic needs test and labour market test with a fixed annual quota for professionals, the US said the administration was willing to address issues related to additional concessions in the movement of workers and professionals with the Congress, trade diplomats said.
On its part, India has indicated it could take on more commitments at the multinational level in the area of opening up its telecom and courier services and, to some extent, certain parts of its financial services by relaxing foreign equity caps. The country���s levels of commitments in services at WTO made during the previous Uruguay round are lower than the existing levels of openness in the country.
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As many as 30 WTO members with interest in liberalisation of the services sector including India, Australia , the EU, the US, Pakistan, Brazil, Canada, Malaysia and Mexico participated in a ���signalling��� conference on Saturday in which they indicated the areas where they could give concessions and where they would want more openings in the markets of other countries.
The signalling conference was designed to give members an idea about the direction in which the services talks could go once issues in other areas like agriculture and Nama (industrial goods) were resolved.
After the conference, commerce and industry minister Kamal Nath said there was a good movement by the US and EU. ���They have offered to do some bindings in contractual service supplies and independent professionals, which is a constructive sign. We have made substantial offers in many areas. Obviously, our offers are subject to what we get,��� he said.
According to commerce secretary G K Pillai, the EU offer was more specific .
���They have put a quota system and have removed the economic needs test,��� he said. The economic needs test is a non-tariff barrier which requires that it be proved that the economy of the country to which a worker is travelling to for providing services really requires his/her services. Trade diplomats said the EU has proposed it could replace the test with a quota of 80,000 professionals every year. The proposed quota is much higher than the US quota of 60,000 professionals.
The EU too seems happy with the indications given by India in the conference . EU trade commissioner Peter Mandelson told media after the session that there had been ���some interesting��� offers from India and China . ���I heard some interesting signals from India, and a couple of things from China, one in particular that I want to specify, to follow up,��� he said.
POSITIVE POSITIONS
India could open up telecom, courier services & financial services.
30 members met on Saturday to indicate areas of concessions.
���We have made substantial offers in many areas. Obviously, our offers are subject to what we get,��� commented Kamal Nath.
Indian and Chinese offers are interesting, Peter Mandelson said.
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