India-EU Free Trade Agreement: Strategic Economic Partnership After Two Decades

Context:
India and the European Union (EU) concluded negotiations for a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) after nearly two decades of discussions, aiming to expand trade, reduce tariffs, and strengthen economic cooperation.

Key Highlights:

Trade Agreement Details

  • The EU will eliminate duties on about 70.4% of tariff lines immediately, covering roughly 90.7% of India’s export value.
  • India will remove tariffs on 49.6% of tariff lines, covering 30.6% of EU trade value.

Trade Volume and Market Size

  • India–EU bilateral merchandise trade reached approximately ₹11.5 lakh crore ($136.54 billion) in 2024-25.
  • Indian exports accounted for ₹6.4 lakh crore ($75.85 billion).
  • The agreement connects markets with a combined economic size of about $24 trillion.

Sectoral Benefits

  • Key Indian sectors expected to benefit include:
    • Textiles and apparel
    • Marine products
    • Leather goods
    • Gems and jewellery
  • These sectors currently face tariffs ranging from 4% to 26% in the EU market.

Services Sector Opportunities

  • The FTA includes commitments across 144 service sub-sectors, including:
    • IT and IT-enabled services
    • Professional services
    • Education services
    • Traditional medicine (AYUSH) where EU regulations permit.

Sensitive Sector Exclusions

  • India excluded beef, dairy, and cereals from tariff commitments.
  • The EU excluded beef, sugar, and rice.

Tariff Adjustments

  • European wine tariffs will reduce gradually to 30% for wines priced €2.5–€10 and 20% for wines above €10, subject to quotas.
  • Tariffs on motor vehicles may fall from 110% to 10% under quota conditions, excluding cars priced below ₹25 lakh.

Concerns: Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM)

  • CBAM imposes carbon tariffs on imports from countries with less stringent climate policies.
  • India secured a commitment that any concessions granted to other countries will also apply to India.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Free Trade Agreement (FTA)
    • A trade pact between countries aimed at reducing or eliminating tariffs, quotas, and other trade barriers.
  • Tariff Lines
    • Individual product categories listed in a country’s customs tariff schedule used to determine import duties.
  • European Union (EU)
    • A political and economic union of 27 European countries with a single market and customs union.
  • Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM)
    • EU policy imposing carbon pricing on imported goods such as steel, aluminium, cement, fertilisers, and electricity.

Relevant Mains Points:

Significance of the India–EU FTA

  • Boosts trade diversification by expanding access to European markets.
  • Enhances global value chain integration for Indian manufacturing sectors.
  • Strengthens strategic economic partnership between India and the EU.

Economic Benefits for India

  • Increased exports in labour-intensive sectors such as textiles and leather.
  • Expansion of services trade, particularly in IT and professional services.
  • Improved access to advanced technology and investment from EU firms.

Strategic Importance

  • Reduces India’s dependence on single-market trade partners.
  • Supports India’s vision of becoming a global manufacturing hub under initiatives like Make in India.

Challenges

  • Concerns over EU environmental standards and CBAM regulations.
  • Competition from EU agricultural and industrial products.
  • Need for domestic industry preparedness.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen export competitiveness and quality standards to meet EU regulations.
  • Support MSMEs and labour-intensive sectors to leverage tariff reductions.
  • Develop climate-compliant production systems to address CBAM challenges.

UPSC Relevance:

  • Prelims: FTA, CBAM, EU trade policy.
  • Mains: GS II – India-EU relations; GS III – international trade, economic diplomacy.
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