Trade ministers of countries, including India, China and Japan, will meet on August 5 in Laos to iron out issues holding back negotiations of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP).
There are several complex issues, including the proposed three-tier system of tariff relaxation and services sector matters, which need intervention at a ministerial level, a senior official said.
"On August 5, all the trade ministers will meet to deliberate on those issues and try to resolve them so that the talks can be concluded on time," the official added.
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"A few countries want duty elimination on about 99 per cent of the goods traded among the RCEP members, but nations, including India, are of the view that moderate relaxation in taxes too would give significant market access to all the member countries," the official said.
India has decided to offer greater access to its market for ASEAN countries - with which it has a free trade agreement in place - and has proposed to eliminate duties or tariffs on 80 per cent of items for the 10-nation bloc under this proposed pact.
Similarly, for Japan and South Korea, it has offered to open up 65 per cent of its product space.
For Australia, New Zealand and China, Delhi has proposed to eliminate duties on only 42.5 per cent of products, as India does not have any kind of FTA with these three countries.
RCEP is a mega trade deal which aims to cover goods, services, investments, economic and technical cooperation, competition and intellectual property rights.
The talks for the pact started in Phnom Penh in November 2012. The 16 countries account for over a quarter of the world's economy, estimated to be more than USD 75 trillion.
India already has FTAs with the ASEAN grouping, Japan and South Korea.
The 16-member bloc RCEP comprises 10 ASEAN members (Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Singapore, Thailand, the Philippines, Laos and Vietnam) and their six FTA partners - India, China, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.