India–US Trade Tensions

GS2 – International Relations

Context

U.S. President Donald Trump has proposed imposing a 25% tariff on Indian goods starting August 1, 2025, citing India’s protectionist trade policies and strategic closeness to Russia.

Root Causes of Trade Friction
  • Trade Deficit Issues: Trump criticized India’s trade practices as “obnoxious,” pointing to the persistent U.S.–India trade imbalance.
  • Russia Angle: India’s continued oil imports and defence partnerships with Russia post-Ukraine war have emerged as key U.S. concerns.
  • Breakdown in Trade Talks: Earlier efforts toward a trade agreement had shown promise, but the proposed tariffs reflect strategic signalling rather than commercial logic.
Economic and Strategic Implications

Global Trade Norms Under Strain

  • WTO Undermined: Unilateral tariffs violate the multilateral spirit of WTO agreements.
  • Geoeconomics Over Rules: Demonstrates the increasing role of strategic interests over rule-based systems, weakening post-WWII trade frameworks.

India’s Trade Policy Dilemma

  • Strategic Autonomy: India must carefully balance its defence and energy independence with growing U.S. pressure.
  • Push for Reforms: The tariff threat may catalyse India to diversify exports and boost domestic manufacturing.

State of Bilateral Relations

  • Continued Strategic Convergence: Despite tensions, India and the U.S. continue cooperating on platforms like QUAD, IPEF, and G20.
  • Trust Deficit Risk: Unilateral U.S. actions may delay a comprehensive trade deal and weaken bilateral confidence.

India remained the largest trade partner of the U.S. for the fourth consecutive year (2024–25), with trade worth $131.84 billion.

Impact on Indian Exports
  • Sensitive Sectors: Likely to be hit are textiles, pharma, auto parts, engineering goods, and IT services.
  • Comparative Disadvantage: The proposed 25–26% tariff rate is higher than for Indonesia (19%) and Vietnam (20–40%), though lower than China and Bangladesh.
  • Supply Chain Risk: Many Indian sectors rely on Chinese imports, making them vulnerable to trans-shipment clauses.
  • Additional Strains: Further stress from proposed BRICS oil tariffs and extra duties on steel and aluminium.
  • MSME Vulnerability: Smaller exporters may face job losses and shrinking global competitiveness.
Way Forward
  1. Trade Diplomacy
    • Revive Trade Policy Forum talks.
    • Explore interim agreements in areas like pharmaceuticals, agriculture, and digital trade.
  2. Export Diversification
    • Accelerate FTAs with EU, ASEAN, Africa, and Latin America.
    • Promote rupee-based trade and regional supply chain resilience.
  3. Boost Domestic Competitiveness
    • Expand PLI schemes, upgrade logistics.
    • Support MSMEs with credit, insurance, and digital export tools.
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