Increasing the insurance cap by India is virtually a "must" for inking of the long-pending India-European Union FTA, which has seen 15 rounds of negotiations since its launch in 2007.
Germany, a key EU-member, has also made it clear that a only a "comprehensive" broad-based Indian-EU Trade and Investment Agreement (BTIA) was acceptable and not a "partial" one. India has recently inked a selective FTA with ASEAN which excludes two countries--Philippines and Indonesia-- in services sector.
The India-EU FTA will be on the agenda during the talks between German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who is travelling to Berlin on April 10 on a bilateral visit, German Ambassador Michael Steiner told reporters while asserting that both countries were in favour of early inking of the pact.
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While the issues like duty concessions in automobile and wine and spirit sectors are on the way to be resolved with India agreeing to relax duties in these areas, the increase in the insurance cap is big "decisive" factor as the pact will not find support in the EU Parliament which has to rectify it.
Last month chief negotiators from India and EU met in Brussels and once again highlighted these issues.
Ahead of a meeting between Anand Sharma and EU trade commissioner Karl De Gucht in Brussels on April 15, both sides are trying to iron out the differences.
Significantly, one of the biggest Asian economies Japan has initiated the FTA with the EU recently and the US will start negotiations with the 27-nation European block in next few months which is also expected to impact India-EU FTA negotiations.
The EU is India's largest trading partner with bilateral trade in 2009-10 aggregated to USD 75 billion.