<p>New Delhi: The US, China, Korea and Chinese Taipei have raised concerns on India's decision to impose import restrictions on laptops, and computers, in a meeting of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), an official said.</p>.<p>The concern was flagged in the meeting of WTO's Committee on Market Access. It was chaired by Renata Crisaldo of Paraguay on October 16, in Geneva.</p>.<p>The US has stated that the decision will have an impact on trade of these products, including US exports to India, once they are implemented, the Geneva-based official said.</p>.LinkedIn cuts 668 Jobs in second layoff round this year.<p>America has also said that the decision is creating uncertainty for exporters and downstream users.</p>.<p>On August 3, India imposed import restrictions on a host of IT hardware products as laptops, personal computers (including tablet computers), micro computers, large or mainframe computers, and certain data processing machines with a view to boost domestic manufacturing and cut imports from countries like China.</p>.<p>The regime would come into effect from November 1.</p>.<p>However, Commerce Secretary Sunil Barthwal last week said that India will not impose licensing requirement on imports but will only monitor their inbound shipments.</p>.<p>The official said that Korea stressed that the proposed measures by India seem inconsistent with WTO rules and could consequently create unnecessary trade barriers.</p>.<p> Seoul requested India to reconsider the implementation of these measures and provide detailed clarifications and information on this issue, including the timeline of its implementation.</p>.<p> India imports about $ 7-8 billion worth of these goods every year.</p>.<p> The country has imported personal computers, including laptops, worth $ 5.33 billion in 2022-23, as against $ 7.37 billion in 2021-22. </p>
<p>New Delhi: The US, China, Korea and Chinese Taipei have raised concerns on India's decision to impose import restrictions on laptops, and computers, in a meeting of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), an official said.</p>.<p>The concern was flagged in the meeting of WTO's Committee on Market Access. It was chaired by Renata Crisaldo of Paraguay on October 16, in Geneva.</p>.<p>The US has stated that the decision will have an impact on trade of these products, including US exports to India, once they are implemented, the Geneva-based official said.</p>.LinkedIn cuts 668 Jobs in second layoff round this year.<p>America has also said that the decision is creating uncertainty for exporters and downstream users.</p>.<p>On August 3, India imposed import restrictions on a host of IT hardware products as laptops, personal computers (including tablet computers), micro computers, large or mainframe computers, and certain data processing machines with a view to boost domestic manufacturing and cut imports from countries like China.</p>.<p>The regime would come into effect from November 1.</p>.<p>However, Commerce Secretary Sunil Barthwal last week said that India will not impose licensing requirement on imports but will only monitor their inbound shipments.</p>.<p>The official said that Korea stressed that the proposed measures by India seem inconsistent with WTO rules and could consequently create unnecessary trade barriers.</p>.<p> Seoul requested India to reconsider the implementation of these measures and provide detailed clarifications and information on this issue, including the timeline of its implementation.</p>.<p> India imports about $ 7-8 billion worth of these goods every year.</p>.<p> The country has imported personal computers, including laptops, worth $ 5.33 billion in 2022-23, as against $ 7.37 billion in 2021-22. </p>