Updated at 4:15 p.m. ET
In his latest salvo against unfair trade practices in a major , President Trump says he plans to end preferential trade treatment for India, which sought to downplay the significance of the move.
sent to Congress on Monday, Trump wrote he is taking the step because "I have determined that India has not assured the United States that it will provide equitable and reasonable access to the markets of India."
says the change will be enacted by presidential proclamation but not for60 days.
Monideepa M. Mukherjee, a spokeswoman for India's commerce ministry, indicated that India has accepted the move, .
"The GSP benefits will go; the U.S. will not relent on this," Mukherjee said.
The U.S. Generalized System of Preferences program, known as , provides duty-free entry into the United States for more than 3,500 from more than .
India is the largest beneficiary of the program, with GPS imports including thousands of products and totaling $5.7 billion in 2017, a USTR spokesperson told NPR in an email.
Implemented in the 1970s, the program was designed to give developing countries a leg up toward expanding their economies.
Today, India boasts fastest-growing economies, with top exports to the U.S. including precious metals and diamonds, mineral fuels and aircraft.
Mukherjee said India has outgrown its GSP status, although she did dispute Trump's assertion that India is not providing the U.S. with reasonable market access, reports the AP.
The U.S. is India's , while India for the U.S.
Mukherjee said the GSP benefits for India amounted to only $190 million a year. Total U.S. goods and services trade with India totals around $126 billion, .
"GSP withdrawal will not have a significant impact on India," Indian commerce secretary Anup Wadhawan.
In a lengthy speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Maryland on Saturday, Trump picked up on an : the U.S. trade imbalance, calling out India in particular.
"India is a very high-tariff nation. They charge us a lot. When we send a motorcycle to India, it's 100 percent tariff. They charge 100 percent. When India sends a motorcycle to us, we brilliantly charge them nothing," Trump said.
The U.S. its goods and services trade deficit with India is more than $27 billion. Contributing to the imbalance are India's import licensing requirements (including for motorcycles), export subsidy programs and lack of transparency in its laws regulating trade, the Commerce Department's International Trade Administration.
Also Monday, he intends to end Turkey's status as a GSP beneficiary, based on that country's economic growth.
Trade Minister Ruhsar Pekcan that Turkey will press ahead with efforts to increase trade, calling the U.S. a "strategic partner."
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