Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
International

Got India Motorcycle Tariffs Down To 50 Per Cent In '2 Minutes': Trump

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Jan, 2019 03:15 AM

    US President Donald Trump has said the decision by India last year to cut the tariffs on motorcycles by half was a fair deal, but rued the high duties on American whisky. At a White House event on the Reciprocal Trade Act on Thursday, Trump flashed out a green colour board that had examples of non-reciprocal tariffs from various countries.


    "Look at motorcycles as an example. (In) India, it was 100 per cent. I got them down to 50 per cent, just by talking for about two minutes. It's still 50 per cent vs 2.4 per cent (on imported motorcycles to the US). Again, other than that, it's a very fair deal," the president said.


    Trump pointed out to the high tariff by India on import of wines. "India has a very high tariff. They charge a lot of tariffs. You look at whisky... India gets 150 per cent, we get nothing."


    India had last February slashed the customs duty on imported motorcycles like Harley-Davidson to 50 per cent after Trump called it "unfair" and threatened to increase the tariff on import of Indian bikes to the US.


    In his interaction with lawmakers at the White House, Trump said the Reciprocal Trade Act would give the US workers a fair and level-playing field against other countries.


    The US, he alleged, had been taken advantage of by many countries all over the world. "They charge us tariffs and taxes, the likes of which nobody has any understanding. They're so high and so unfair! They also have barriers where we can't go in. They have trade barriers that make it impossible for us to sell our farm products and our other products.


    "Whether they think we're very nice or not so smart, they've been doing it for many, many years and we want to end it. Many of these are friends, many of these are allies... but, sometimes, allies take advantage of us even more so than our non-allies," he said.


    Trump said the Reciprocal Trade Act would help to solve the problem once and for all. "Whatever the tariff for a foreign country is, we place the same tariff on us."


    "What's going to happen, I think, from a practical standpoint, is they won't be charging us tariffs anymore. We'll see. Or we''ll charge them a lot. Tremendous amount of money," he said.


    The Reciprocal Trade Act will be an incredible tool to bring foreign countries to the negotiating table and to get them to lower tariffs on US products and also to get rid of their trade barriers, the president asserted.


    America cannot lose almost USD 800 billion on trade like has been done for many years, he said.


    Congressman Sean Duffy, who introduced the Reciprocal Trade Act, has granite from India among his global list of non-reciprocal tariffs.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    More Than Half Of Hate Crimes In USA Go Unreported: Report

    More Than Half Of Hate Crimes In USA Go Unreported: Report
    More than half of the 2,50,000 hate crimes that took place each year between 2004 and 2015 went unreported to law enforcement for a variety of reasons, according to a special report on hate crimes from the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

    More Than Half Of Hate Crimes In USA Go Unreported: Report

    Donald Trump Appoints Indian American Krishna R Urs As US Ambassador To Peru

    Donald Trump Appoints Indian American Krishna R Urs As US Ambassador To Peru
    US President Donald Trump has nominated Krishna R. Urs to be the ambassador to Peru, the White House announced on Wednesday.

    Donald Trump Appoints Indian American Krishna R Urs As US Ambassador To Peru

    Learn From 'Historical Lessons', China Warns India As Army Chief Bipin Rawat Says 'Ready For War'

    Learn From 'Historical Lessons', China Warns India As Army Chief Bipin Rawat Says 'Ready For War'
    In a sharp escalation of rhetoric, China on Thursday reminded India about its military defeat in 1962 and asked it to withdraw troops from "Chinese territory," a precondition Beijing has set for resolving the latest border row in the Sikkim region.

    Learn From 'Historical Lessons', China Warns India As Army Chief Bipin Rawat Says 'Ready For War'

    US Vice President Mike Pence Wants To Visit SpiceJet Office In India

    US Vice President Mike Pence Wants To Visit SpiceJet Office In India
    US Vice President has expressed his desire to visit budget carrier SpiceJet's office on his trip to India in a meeting with the airline's chief Ajay Singh.

    US Vice President Mike Pence Wants To Visit SpiceJet Office In India

    Indians Become Second Highest Number Of Migrants In Australia

    Indians have become the second highest number of migrants living in Australia at 1,63,000 since 2011, next only to people of Chinese origin, according to the latest census data. 

    Indians Become Second Highest Number Of Migrants In Australia

    Kelowna, B.C. Woman Pavla Janeckova Charged With Threatening Premier And Speaker

    Kelowna, B.C. Woman Pavla Janeckova Charged With Threatening Premier And Speaker
    British Columbia's Prosecution Service says a woman has been charged with uttering death threats aimed at Premier Christy Clark and Speaker Steve Thomson.

    Kelowna, B.C. Woman Pavla Janeckova Charged With Threatening Premier And Speaker