India and the US are in advanced stages of finalising a mini trade agreement before July 9. This follows the US decision on April 2 to impose an additional 26% tariff on Indian goods, which was suspended for 90 days. Without a deal in place by the end of this period, the tariffs are expected to come into effect.
Indian officials are aiming for complete exemption from both the 26% additional tariff and the 10% baseline duty that remains in force. However, lowering tariffs below the most-favoured-nation (MFN) rate requires US Congressional approval. An exemption, however, can be granted through administrative action.
India has proposed a minimum import price (MIP) or quotas for sensitive categories like dairy and agriculture. It has also requested tariff concessions on exports such as leather, textiles, garments, gems and jewellery, bananas, grapes, shrimp, and chemicals.
According to a news report, the US is seeking greater access for its exports in categories including electric vehicles, industrial goods, petrochemicals, wines, dairy, and genetically modified crops. India has clarified that while it is open to importing non-GM agricultural goods like alfalfa hay, GM produce remains restricted due to domestic regulations.
The interim deal is to be the first phase of a broader bilateral trade agreement (BTA), with the initial tranche targeted for finalisation by September or October 2025. The BTA will cover around 19 chapters, including goods, services, digital trade, tariffs, non-tariff barriers, and rules of origin. The negotiations are part of the countries' efforts to expand bilateral trade to $500 billion by 2030, as envisioned in the Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA).
Read more: When To Expect the India-US Trade Agreement?
Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal recently met with US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick. Negotiations between chief trade negotiators are scheduled to continue until May 22, 2025.
In FY 24-25, bilateral trade between India and the US stood at $131.84 billion. India’s trade surplus with the US was $41.18 billion, up from $35.32 billion the previous year.
Negotiations continue as both sides look to resolve tariff concerns before the July 9 deadline. The outcome will likely shape the next phase of India-US trade relations.
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Published on: May 22, 2025, 2:04 PM IST
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