INDIA-AUSTRALIA RELATIONSHIP
- The India-Australia bilateral relationship has been underpinned by the shared values of pluralistic, Westminster-style democracies, Commonwealth traditions, expanding economic engagement, and increasing high-level interaction
- Several common traits, including strong, vibrant, secular, and multicultural democracies, a free press, an independent judicial system, and English language, serve as the foundation for closer co-operation and multifaceted interaction between the two countries
- The end of the Cold War and beginning of India’s economic reforms in 1991 provided the impetus for the development of closer ties between the two nations.
- The ever-increasing numbers of Indian students travelling to Australia for higher education, and the growing tourism and sporting links, have played a significant role in strengthening bilateral relations
- With the passage of time, ties evolved in the direction of a strategic relationship, alongside the existing economic engagement
- In recent years, the relationship has charted a new trajectory of transformational growth
- With greater convergence of views on issues such as international terrorism, and a shared commitment to a rules-based order in the Indo-Pacific region, the two democracies have taken their cooperation to plurilateral formats, including the Quad (with the United States and Japan).
- In September 2014, Australia’s Prime Minister Tony Abbott visited India, and in November that year, Modi became the first Indian Prime Minister to make an official visit to Australia after Rajiv Gandhi in 1986
- He also became the first Indian PM to address a joint sitting of the Parliament of Australia
- At the India-Australia Leaders’ Virtual Summit in June 2020, Modi and Prime Minister Scott Morrison elevated the bilateral relationship from the Strategic Partnership concluded in 2009 to a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership (CSP)
- At the 2nd India-Australia Virtual Summit in March 2022, several key announcements were made, including on a Letter of Intent on Migration and Mobility Partnership Arrangement to foster the exchange of skills, and a Letter of Arrangement for Educational Qualifications Recognition to facilitate the mobility of students and professionals
- There has been a series of high-level engagements and exchange of ministerial visits in 2022 and in 2023
- It is the first Free Trade Agreement (FTA) that India has signed with a major developed country in over a decade.
- The Agreement encompasses cooperation across the entire gamut of bilateral economic and commercial relations between the two friendly countries, and covers areas like:
- Trade in Goods, Rules of Origin
- Trade in Services
- Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT)
- Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) measures
- Dispute Settlement, Movement of Natural Persons
- Telecom, Customs Procedures
- Pharmaceutical products, and Cooperation in other Areas
- The India-Australia Economic and Cooperation Trade Agreement (Ind-Aus ECTA ), which is expected to double trade between the two countries to $50 billion, came into effect.
- The Ind-Aus ECTA provides an institutional mechanism to encourage and improve trade between the two countries
- It covers almost all the tariff lines dealt by India and Australia
- India will benefit from preferential market access provided by Australia on 100% of its tariff lines, including all the labor-intensive sectors of export interest to India, such as Gems and Jewellery, Textiles, leather, footwear, furniture among other
- On the other hand, India will be offering preferential access to Australia on over 70% of its tariff lines, including lines of export interest to Australia, which are primarily raw materials and intermediaries such as coal, mineral ores and wines
- Products like agricultural products and the dairy sector - which were very sensitive for India and without which Australia has never done an agreement before - have been protected
- It is estimated that an additional 10 lakh jobs would be created in India under ECTA
Previous Year Questions :
1.Consider the following countries: (2018 UPSC)
Which of the above are among the ‘free-trade partners’ of ASEAN? (a) 1, 2, 4 and 5 Ans: (c) |