Swiss
Promote
Trade Accord with India
A free trade agreement between
Switzerland and India would be
a major milestone in economic
relations between the two countries,
a recent conference in Zurich
has resolved.
The state secretary in the Swiss
economics ministry, Jean-Daniel
Gerber, said such an agreement
would provide a further boost
to bilateral trade and investment.
He was speaking at The Forum for
International Business organised
by the country's main trade promotion
organisation, Osec - Business
Network Switzerland.
The idea of such an accord has
been mooted for some time but
no date has yet been set for the
start of any negotiations. A joint
study group is exploring the possibilities.
"One reason is the sheer
size of the Indian market with
a billion inhabitants, then there's
the development of the economy
which has grown at rates of up
to nine per cent," Gerber
said.
He said that since India was discussing
such an accord with the European
Union, it was in Switzerland's
interest to take a similar step.
Otherwise Swiss companies might
have less favourable conditions
than, for example, competitors
in Germany, Britain and Italy.
Gerber said there was no precise
timetable but he would like to
see movement in the near future.
"We would like to go as rapidly
as possible but it would not be
prudent of me to say that it [the
accord] will happen in a short
time. I'm happy if it happens
in the next three years.”
He reminded the audience of 600,
mainly representatives from small
and medium-sized enterprises,
that in the framework of Switzerland's
foreign economic strategy, India
had been identified as a country
of high importance.
India's Minister of Commerce and
Industry Kamal Nath also encouraged
further bilateral trade ties,
noting that there was a "natural
partnership". There was his
country's huge market and young,
skilled workforce, while Switzerland
had the technology and innovation.
"In the new [global] economic
architecture that's emerging,
what better country than India
for Switzerland to partner with?,"
Kamal Nath said.
Intellectual property
Nath also touched on intellectual
property rights, an issue on which
India has come in for much criticism
because of what is considered
weak protection.
Swiss pharmaceutical company Novartis
is currently going through the
Indian courts over patent protection
for its blockbuster leukaemia
drug Gleevec /Glivec.
"The ethos of India respects
intellectual property. India is
not a country where you can go
and get a fake Rolex watch. You'll
have to go to some other country
in Asia to get that. "We've
built in patent legislation and
we want to see good implementation
of the laws," he added.
Gerber said that India had made
"quite a lot of progress"
in comparison with the situation
that existed three or four years
ago, but there was room for improvement.
"The question is how it [the
legislation] is implemented and
how it is interpreted.
“We'll have a working group
with India to improve the situation.
Work is in progress and it's going
in the right direction,"
he said.