India–Oman Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA)

Context:

  • India and Oman signed a Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) in Muscat.
  • The agreement aims to enhance bilateral trade, investment, and economic cooperation by providing duty-free market access to Indian exports.
  • It marks a significant milestone in India’s trade diplomacy with the Gulf region.

Key Highlights:

Agreement Insights:

  • CEPA grants India duty-free access to 98.3% of Oman’s tariff lines, covering 99% of India’s exports to Oman.
  • Oman has liberalised tariffs on 77.7% of its total tariff lines, covering 94.9% of India’s exports.
  • India will eliminate tariffs on 83.6% of its tariff lines for imports from Oman, covering 90.1% of India’s imports from Oman.

Trade & Economic Impact:

  • India’s exports to Oman stood at $4.02 billion in 2024–25, accounting for 0.93% of India’s total exports.
  • Imports from Oman were $6.5 billion, making up 0.91% of India’s total imports.

Strategic Dimensions:

  • CEPA is India’s first trade agreement with a Gulf country after the UAE CEPA (2022).
  • Oman is the first country since the US (2006) with which India has signed such an agreement.
  • The agreement is aligned with India–Oman Vision Partnership and supports cooperation in the Indo-Pacific, energy security, and regional connectivity.

Stakeholders Involved:

  • Signed in the presence of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Sultan Haitham bin Tarik of Oman.
  • Negotiated by India’s Ministry of Commerce and Industry and Oman’s Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Investment Promotion.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Issue: Need to expand India’s trade footprint in the Gulf region and diversify export markets.
  • Government Initiative: CEPA as part of India’s FTA/CEPAs strategy (UAE CEPA, Australia ECTA, etc.).
  • Benefits:
    • Boost to labour-intensive sectors such as textiles, gems & jewellery, MSMEs, artisans, and women-led enterprises.
    • Improved market access, supply chain integration, and trade facilitation.
  • Challenges:
    • Ensuring competitiveness of Indian MSMEs.
    • Managing trade imbalances and compliance with rules of origin.
  • Impact:
    • Strengthens India’s role as a reliable economic partner in the Gulf and Indo-Pacific.

Relevant Mains Points:

  • Key Concepts: Free Trade Agreements (FTAs), CEPA, tariff liberalisation, trade diversification.
  • Static Linkages:
    • India’s Look West / Link West Policy.
    • Role of Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) in India’s energy and trade security.
  • Significance:
    • Enhances economic trust, investment flows, and people-to-people ties.
    • Serves as a gateway for Indian trade to GCC, Africa, Central Asia, and Eastern Europe.
  • Way Forward:
    • Strengthen export competitiveness and standards compliance.
    • Promote services trade, digital trade, and green energy cooperation.
    • Use CEPA as a template for future GCC-wide trade engagement.

UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):

  • GS I: India’s relations with Gulf countries
  • GS II: International relations, bilateral agreements
  • GS III: Economy – foreign trade, FTAs, MSMEs, employment
  • GS IV: Ethical dimensions of inclusive growth and cooperation
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