India’s Actions Aimed at Chinese Products and Investment: A Comprehensive Overview

India’s Actions Aimed at Chinese Products and Investment: A Comprehensive Overview

NEW DELHI, Aug 5 (Reuters) – India said on Friday it would⁣ defer the imposition of a licensing requirement​ for imports of laptops, tablets and personal computers by three months – partially reversing the surprise decision it announced a⁣ day earlier.While India has ‍not said the new requirement is aimed at⁣ China, more than half of its roughly $10 billion ‍in annual imports of personal computers and tablets are Chinese-made.Relations between the countries have deteriorated since mid-2020, when Chinese and ​Indian troops clashed on their‌ disputed Himalayan frontier and​ 24 people ‌were killed.Several Indian government officials, who asked not to be named, said the licensing measure aimed to address a trade imbalance with China.Here are some other Chinese trade and investment ventures affected ⁣by Indian measures since ⁣2020:INVESTMENT PLAN BY BYDChina’s BYD (002594.SZ) told its India joint-venture partner last month it would shelve plans for a new $1-billion‍ investment to build‍ electric cars after its investment proposal faced scrutiny from New Delhi.GREAT WALL MOTOR INVESTMENT PLANGreat Wall Motor (601633.SS) shelved plans last year to ⁣invest $1 billion in India⁣ and laid off ⁤all employees at ⁤its ‍operations⁣ there after failing to obtain regulatory approvals.XIAOMI ASSET FREEZEIndia’s ⁢federal financial crime agency has frozen $670 million of Xiaomi’s (1810.HK) bank assets since last year, posing a significant ⁢challenge to the smartphone maker. The agency alleges ⁢that Xiaomi ⁢made illegal remittances ⁣to foreign entities in the name of royalties. The company denies ⁢wrongdoing.MOBILE APPS BANCiting data and privacy issues, India ‍has banned about 300 Chinese mobile apps​ including popular ones such as the battle-royale‌ format game from Krafton Inc (259960.KS), a South ⁣Korean ​company backed by​ China’s Tencent (0700.HK).NEW INVESTMENT ‌VETTING ‍RULESIn⁣ 2020, India stepped up scrutiny of investments from companies ‍based in neighbouring countries by adding an extra layer of vetting ‍and security clearances, in what was widely seen as a move to stave​ off takeovers and investments by Chinese firms.It has led to billions of dollars in proposed investment getting stuck in the approval process over the last 3 years.Reporting by Aftab Ahmed
Editing by William Mallard and Helen PopperOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Original from www.reuters.com

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