U.S. eyes zero tariff on cars in India trade deal as Tesla entry nears: sources
The Hindu
US pushes India to eliminate high car import tariffs in trade deal, but New Delhi hesitant. Tesla awaits.
The United States wants India to eliminate tariffs on car imports under a proposed trade deal between the two nations, but New Delhi is reluctant to immediately bring down such duties to zero even as it considers further cuts, sources told Reuters.
India's high auto tariffs will feature in formal talks for a bilateral trade deal that are yet to begin, said one of the three sources, all of whom were briefed on the matter, paving the way for American electric vehicle maker Tesla, which is gearing up for an India launch.
Taxes on cars imported into India are as high as 110%, which Tesla chief Elon Musk has criticised as being among the steepest in the world. The EV giant last year shelved its plans to enter the world's third-largest car market for a second time.
Also read | Nobody can argue with me: Trump on reciprocal tariff with India
Mr. Musk has now found support from U.S. President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly railed against India's high taxes and in an address to the U.S. Congress on Tuesday slammed the country's auto tariffs of more than 100%, threatening reciprocal action.
"The U.S. ask is for India to bring tariffs down to zero or negligible in most sectors, except agriculture," the first source said, adding the expectation on New Delhi eliminating auto tariffs was "clearer than any other".
A second source said India was "listening to the U.S." and had not pushed back, adding it would respond with its position on the tariffs after consulting local industries.

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