EU-India Relations — Keeping up the Momentum Needed for a Vital Strategic Partnership
Relations between the EU and India seem to be back on track since leaders met in Brussels, on 30 March 2016, for their first summit in four years. They endorsed the EU-India Agenda for Action 2020 and their water, clean energy and climate partnerships; they welcomed the negotiations on a broad-based Bilateral Trade and Investment Agreement (BTIA) and agreed that the fact that they are currently stalled should not stand in the way of the overall development of the relationship. They set a common agenda on migration and mobility and they adopted a joint declaration on counter-terrorism. It is vital to keep up the momentum created at the summit. The strategic relationship is vital to both sides: India is Asia’s third-largest economy and the world’s fastest growing economy and the EU is India’s biggest trading partner. The EU is also the largest investor in India, with foreign direct investment stock valued at EUR 38.5 billion in 2014, and is the primary destination for Indian foreign investment.
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Cuvânt-cheie
- acord de cooperare (UE)
- apărare
- Asia şi Oceania
- COMERŢ
- comerţ internaţional
- condiția femeii
- construcţie europeană
- DREPT
- drept penal
- drepturile individului
- drepturile omului
- ECONOMIE
- FINANŢE
- GEOGRAFIE
- geografie economică
- India
- investiţii şi finanţare
- investiții
- negociere de acord (UE)
- Parlament
- parlament bicameral
- POLITICĂ
- politică de apărare
- politică externă
- politică internaţională
- politică şi securitate publică
- problema Kashmirului
- PROBLEME SOCIALE
- putere executivă şi administraţie publică
- RELAŢII INTERNAŢIONALE
- relații comerciale
- relații interparlamentare
- reuniune la nivel înalt
- securitate internațională
- situație economică
- situație economică
- situație politică
- UNIUNEA EUROPEANĂ
- viaţă socială
- violență sexuală
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