Stalled free trade negotiations with India have taken a positive step forward with a commitment from the Indian Agriculture Minister, Radha Mohan Singh, to schedule the next round of talks following a meeting in New Delhi with his New Zealand counterpart, Nathan Guy.
Leading a business delegation to India to promote trade links and next year's Cricket World Cup, Guy told a business lunch in Mumbai that after "too long" since the ninth round of talks on a bi-lateral free trade agreement, work is now under way to schedule the 10th round.
"It's real. Officials are scrambling," Guy told BusinessDesk of plans for a 10th round of negotiations for an FTA, which the New Zealand government began pursuing in 2011 when it identified India as the first country to be targeted for development under its Newland Inc. strategy.
Despite a population similar to China's, two-way trade between India and New Zealand is barely $1.1 billion, compared to the explosion to more than $20 billion with China since an FTA was signed in 2008.
However, the talks foundered as the Indian economy weakened and the political fortunes of the Congress Party-led government of former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh deteriorated. The election of a new government, led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, has raised hopes the talks might be reignited.