India–EU Free Trade Agreement Finalised – Landmark Trade Pact After Two Decades

Context:
India and the European Union (EU) concluded a long-pending Free Trade Agreement (FTA) after nearly 20 years of negotiations, marking one of India’s most comprehensive trade deals. The agreement is expected to be operational by 2026.

Key Highlights:

  • Tariff Liberalisation Commitments
  • EU to eliminate tariffs on 99.5% of Indian exports to the 27-member bloc.
  • India to provide tariff concessions on 97.5% of EU exports.
  • 90.7% of Indian exports to receive immediate duty elimination.
  • India to eliminate duties immediately on 49.6% of tariff lines.
  • Sectoral Coverage
  • Key Indian labour-intensive sectors (textiles, leather, gems & jewellery, etc.) worth ₹2.87 lakh crore ($33 billion) to gain zero-duty access.
  • EU gains duty-free access in machinery, aircraft, medical devices, pharmaceuticals.
  • India protects strategic agriculture and dairy sectors.
  • EU retains tariffs on beef, sugar, rice.
  • Services Liberalisation
  • EU commits to 144 services sub-sectors (IT/ITeS, professional services, education).
  • India opens 102 sub-sectors (telecom, maritime, financial, environmental services).
  • Strategic Significance
  • Both economies together account for ~1/3rd of global trade.
  • Reduces strategic dependency amid global supply-chain disruptions.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Free Trade Agreement (FTA): Pact between countries to reduce/eliminate tariffs and trade barriers.
  • Tariff: Tax imposed on cross-border goods.
  • Ratification: Formal approval process making treaty legally binding.
  • EU comprises 27 member states.
  • India has recently pursued FTAs with UAE, Australia, and UK—indicating a proactive trade strategy.

Relevant Mains Points:

  1. Economic Impact
  • Enhances export competitiveness, especially for MSMEs.
  • Boosts integration into Global Value Chains (GVCs).
  • Diversifies trade beyond over-dependence on single markets.
  1. Strategic & Geopolitical Dimensions
  • Strengthens India’s position amid China–EU tensions.
  • Promotes rules-based multilateral trade.
  • Enhances cooperation in green technology and digital trade.
  1. Concerns
  • Increased competition for Indian manufacturing.
  • Regulatory standards (SPS, TBT norms) may act as non-tariff barriers.
  • Services mobility issues may persist.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen domestic manufacturing under Make in India.
  • Improve standards compliance infrastructure.
  • Ensure balanced ratification with stakeholder consultations.

UPSC Relevance:

  • GS 2: International Relations – India–EU relations
  • GS 3: Economy – Trade policy, FTAs, export competitiveness
  • Prelims: Trade terms, tariff structures
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