Thailand signs free trade, other agreements with India
Thailand signs free trade, other agreements with India
Agence France-Presse
Bangkok
India and Thailand on Thursday signed a landmark free trade
agreement (FTA) providing for free trade on all goods by 2010,
witnessed by prime ministers Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Thaksin
Shinawatra.
The signing ceremony followed bilateral talks between the two
leaders on the first day of a four-day visit to the kingdom by
India's Vajpayee.
The FTA allows for an "early harvest" scheme which will see
tariffs slashed to zero over two years from March next year on 84
products worth about 7.6 percent of total two-way trade,
according to Thai commerce ministry officials.
Thaksin told reporters he hoped two-way trade, valued at
US$1.2 billion, would almost double next year as a result of the
deal.
"I hope that two-way trade with India will grow to $2.0
billion next year," he said, noting that the deal will give Thai
business free access to a market of more than one billion people,
50 million of whom are millionaires.
The agreement includes products such as fruit, tinned seafood,
jewellery, air conditioners, televisions, radios and furniture.
Thailand is the third country to reach a free trade deal with
India after Nepal and Sri Lanka, while India is the second
country to sign such a pact with Thailand after China.
For Thailand, the FTA with India establishes it as a strategic
partner to balance the kingdom's political and trade ties with
China.
Thaksin urged Thai businesspeople to prepare themselves as the
kingdom creaks open the door completely to free trade with 2.3
billion people.
"Thailand is the first country to sign free trade agreements
almost simultaneously with the world's two most populous
countries, China and India," he said.
Thaksin and Vajpayee witnessed the signing of the deal by
their respective commerce ministers along with four other
agreements, which focused on aviation, visa waivers for diplomats
and cooperation in agriculture and biotechnology.
The "open skies" deal grants Thai airlines permission to fly
to a further 18 cities on top of four current destinations, while
Thailand will allow Indian airlines to fly to provincial
destinations.
Vajpayee's program during the four-day visit includes an
audience on Friday with Thailand's revered monarch King Bhumibol
Adulyadej at his palace in the seaside town of Hua Hin south of
Bangkok.
The Indian leader will depart for the northern city of Chiang
Mai on Saturday noon where Thaksin will host a dinner before he
leaves for New Delhi on Sunday.