Harsha Vardhana Singh
Harsha
Vardhana Singh completed his Masters in Economics from Delhi in 1979 and went
to the University of Oxford (U.K.) as a Rhodes Scholar from India to obtain his
M.Phil. and Ph.D. in Economics.
He
worked as consultant with the Bureau of Industrial Costs and Prices (Government
of India) in New Delhi, and ILO and UNCTAD in Geneva before joining the GATT
Secretariat. Mr. Singh worked for 12 years in the GATT/WTO Secretariat, in
various parts of the organization, including the Office of the WTO Director
General (1996-97), the Trade and Environment and Technical Barriers to Trade
Division (1995-96), Rules Division (1991-95), Trade Policy Review Division
(1989-1991), and the Economic Research and Analysis Unit (1985-1989). The work
covered diverse areas such as servicing Committees in the area of GATT Rules,
secretary of dispute settlement panels, Uruguay Round negotiations, interacting
with other agencies, and a range of other activities in the Director General’s
office including co-ordination of in-house activities and those involving other
multilateral organizations.
In
June 1997, Mr. Singh joined the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) as
Economic Advisor, in the year when the Telecom Regulatory Body was established
by the Government of India to strengthen the regulatory process and telecom
policy reform in the country. Since May 2001, Mr. Singh has been the Secretary
cum Principal Advisor of the TRAI. In this capacity, he was Head of the TRAI
Secretariat, and was involved in all policy initiatives of TRAI, and all
interactions of TRAI with national and international agencies/bodies, including
multilateral agencies, regulatory bodies, the relevant bodies in the Government
and the Indian Parliament. During this period, Mr. Singh was also a member of
several High Level Committees to address various policy issues, and has served
as Chair of dispute settlement panels of the WTO. He has also been a member of
various trade advisory committees of the Indian government and has worked on
the Foreign Trade Policy of India.
He
has interacted with a number of research Bodies. Recently, he became an
Honorary Professor at the Indian Council for Research on International Economic
Relations (ICRIER), and a member of the visiting faculty at the TERI School of Advanced
Studies for their Masters programme in Regulatory Studies. He has authored a
number of papers on trade policy and regulatory issues.