Foreign Trade Policy of India: A case study of Impotents in Domestic & International
| Vol-4 | Issue-9 | September-2019 | Published Online: 16 September 2019 PDF ( 248 KB ) | ||
| Author(s) | ||
| Dr. Ashutosh Kumar Janam 1 | ||
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1M.Com, Ph.D, Sr.Account Officer, Neutral Publishing House Ltd. |
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| Abstract | ||
India is presently known as one of the most important players in the global economic landscape. Its trade policies, Government reforms and inherent economic strengths has attributed to its standing as one of the most sought-after destination for foreign investments in the world. Also, technological, and infrastructural development being carried out across the country augurs well for the trade and economic sector in the years to come. The Government of India has been working on striking important deals with the Governments of Japan, Australia, and China to increase contribution towards the economic development of the country and growth in the global market. India’s permanent representative to the United Nations in Geneva and New York. He served as a member and chair of nine dispute settlement panels of the GATT and WTO between 1982 and 2007. Between 1988 and 1991, he was the coordinator of the Multilateral Trade Negotiations Project of the UN Development Program and UN Conference on Trade and Development, which advised developing countries in the Uruguay Round. During a career spanning thirty-nine years, he held senior positions in the Indian Ministry of External Affairs, including as secretary for economic relations, as well as important diplomatic posts in Brazil, Japan, Sri Lanka, and the United Kingdom |
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| Keywords | ||
| Trade Balance, Deficit, Exports, Imports, Import Substitution, Capital Formation, Research & Development | ||
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Statistics
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