India Opposes China-Led Investment Facilitation at WTO

By By Rediff Money Desk, NEWDELHI
Feb 20, 2024 19:02
India objects to a China-led proposal on investment facilitation at the WTO, arguing it falls outside the global trade body's mandate. The proposal, aimed at easing investment, is being pushed by a group of 130 countries and will be discussed at the upcoming WTO Ministerial Conference in Abu Dhabi.
New Delhi, Feb 20 (PTI) India strongly opposes efforts of certain countries like China to push a proposal on investment facilitation at the WTO, an official said on Tuesday as the agenda falls outside the mandate of the global trade body.

The issue will figure in the Ministerial Conference (MC) of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in Abu Dhabi. The four-day meet will start from February 26.

MC is the highest decision making body of the WTO.

A China-led group of 130 countries are pushing for the Investment Facilitation for Development (IFD) proposal.

The group wants to bring the proposal through annexure-4 of the WTO under which the proposal would be binding on only the signatory members and not on those who are opposed to it.

"We are against that also," the official said, adding that India has opposed it as that would dilute the multilateral nature of the WTO.

The official also said that if these countries want to negotiate the subject, they should do it outside the formal structure of the WTO.

India's concern emanates from the fact that proponents of IFD should not be attempting to bring a "non-mandated, non-multilateral issue" to the formal process in the WTO. Such an attempt will be in violation of the WTO framework and fundamental rule of consensus-based decision-making.

There has not been any ministerial mandate for negotiations on investment-related matters, the official said.

While all decisions at the WTO happens through consensus, it also allows member countries to form a group and have agreements among themselves.

Such pacts comes under the annexure 4 of the WTO that deals with plurilateral agreements.

The IFD was first mooted in 2017 by China and other countries who depend heavily on Chinese investments, and countries with sovereign wealth funds are party to that pact.

Among major countries, the US is also sitting out of the agreement. Sri Lanka and Pakistan are also not part of it.
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