Context:
India and the European Union have finalized a Free Trade Agreement (FTA), marking a major step in strengthening economic and strategic ties.
Key Highlights:
Tariff Liberalisation
• EU to eliminate tariffs on 99.5% of Indian exports
• India to offer concessions on 97.5% of European exports
• Most EU tariffs to drop to zero immediately
Sensitive Sector Protection
• India excluded strategic agriculture & dairy sectors
• EU excluded its own sensitive agricultural items
• Quota-based system for automobiles
• Controlled tariff concessions on wine imports
Outstanding Issues
• No concession secured on Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM)
• CBAM currently applies to six carbon-intensive products but may expand
Economic Significance
• EU accounts for ~12% of India’s total trade (2024–25)
• Addresses contentious issues that stalled 2013 negotiations
• Enhances India’s integration into global value chains
Relevant Prelims Points:
• Free Trade Agreement (FTA): Pact to reduce/eliminate tariffs between countries.
• Tariff Concession: Reduction in import duty.
• Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM): EU’s carbon tax on imports from countries with less stringent climate norms.
• Quota-based tariffs allow controlled import volumes at reduced duty.
• EU comprises 27 member countries.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Economic Benefits for India:
- Boost to labour-intensive exports (textiles, pharmaceuticals, engineering goods).
- Enhanced market access to high-income European markets.
- Strategic Importance:
- Reduces overdependence on single markets (e.g., U.S., China).
- Strengthens India’s role in emerging multipolar trade architecture.
- Concerns:
- CBAM may hurt Indian steel, aluminium exports.
- Need for rapid domestic reforms in logistics and manufacturing.
- Potential pressure on MSMEs due to European competition.
- Way Forward:
- Fast-track ratification process.
- Accelerate green transition to mitigate CBAM risks.
- Promote scale-based manufacturing and standards compliance.
UPSC Relevance:
• GS 2 – India-EU Relations
• GS 3 – International Trade, Climate Policy, Manufacturing
