India’s Trade Deficit with China

GS2 – International Relations

Context
  • In 2024–25, India’s trade deficit with China stood at $99.2 billion, accounting for about 35% of India’s total trade imbalance.
  • Bilateral trade remains skewed, with China dominating India’s imports across multiple sectors.
Why the Deficit is a Concern?
  • Structural Dependence: Heavy reliance on China for critical sectors like pharmaceuticals, electronics, renewable energy, construction, and consumer goods.
  • Critical Inputs:
    • Erythromycin – 97.7% from China
    • Silicon wafers – 96.8%
    • Flat panel displays – 86%
    • Solar cells – 82.7%
    • Lithium-ion batteries – 75.2%
  • Everyday Goods: Laptops (80.5%), embroidery machinery (91.4%), viscose yarn (98.9%) majorly sourced from China.
Risks of Growing Dependence
  • Strategic Leverage: China could use supply chains as a pressure tool in times of geopolitical tensions.
  • Declining Exports: India’s share in bilateral trade has fallen to 11.2% (from 42.3% two decades ago).
  • Industrial Weakness: Reliance on cheap imports undermines domestic manufacturing, reduces competitiveness, and raises vulnerability.
Economic Impact of Rising Deficit
  • Pressure on forex reserves due to high import bills.
  • Currency depreciation leading to higher import costs and inflation.
  • Industrial hollowing out – long-term slowdown of domestic industries and manufacturing growth.
Policy Measures Taken
  • Production Linked Incentive (PLI) Schemes: Across 14 sectors to boost local manufacturing capacity.
  • Stricter Quality Standards: Certifications and testing protocols to filter substandard imports.
  • Supply Diversification: Encouragement of alternative supply chains beyond China.
  • Import Monitoring: DGTR oversight to check sudden import surges.
  • Anti-dumping Duties: Applied on Chinese goods such as chemicals, engineering items, etc.
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