India today secured an assurance from China that it will "seriously" address the unviable trade imbalance that gives it a $16-billion surplus, even as it opened, for the first time, its market for Indian agricultural produce by allowing the maiden commercial consignment of mangoes.
The assurance has been conveyed to President Pratibha Patil by Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and was reiterated in this commercial capital of China by the Shanghai Municipal Communist Party Secretary Yu Zhengsheng, Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao told reporters at the conclusion of the Indian leader's discussions with the Chinese leadership.
Rao said Wen, whom Patil had met in Beijing, had told he would "seriously" look into the trade imbalance issue and Yu today said addressing trade balance was part of their long-term strategy.
In 2009, the trade imbalance tilted heavily against India. China enjoyed trade surplus of $16 billion out of the total $44 billion bilateral trade and its exports to India nearly touched $30 billion last year.
"...They have assured us that it is something they take very seriously and they understand that it is unviable to sustain such trade imbalance in the medium term and long term," Rao said.
On the penultimate day of the six-day state visit, Patil visited the India pavilion at the Shanghai Expo 2010, which has the world's biggest bamboo dome, as a "unique example" of Sino-India harmony.
She pitched for green technologies to ensure "good life" in cities and said the pavilion, which was built jointly by Indians and Chinese, was a "unique example of the harmony" between the two countries.
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She also unveiled a statue of Nobel Laureate Rabindranath Tagore in honour of his visit to this Chinese city that left a lasting impression on Chinese poets and writers.
Rao said India has sent the first consignment of mangoes to China for commercial purposes. Indian officials said the country will "soon" export basmati rice.