India–U.S. Interim Trade Deal

INDIA–U.S. INTERIM TRADE DEAL

India and the U.S. recently signed an interim trade agreement after tariff disputes, but the deal has raised concerns about its impact on farmers, sovereignty, and unequal tariff concessions — an important issue for GS-II preparation in UPSC coaching in Hyderabad.

Background

  • In 2025, U.S. President Donald Trump imposed 25% tariffs on Indian imports and penalised India for importing Russian crude oil.
  • The interim deal reduces U.S. tariffs on Indian goods from 50% to 18%, while India makes major concessions — a development often analysed in IAS coaching in Hyderabad under India–U.S. relations.

India’s Concessions

  • Tariff Reductions – India agreed to lower tariffs and non-tariff barriers on U.S. industrial goods and agricultural products.
  • Russian Oil Ban – India committed to stop importing Russian oil “directly or indirectly.”
  • Purchase Commitment – India pledged to buy $500 billion worth of U.S. products (energy, aircraft, metals, technology, coal) over five years.

Potential Benefits

  • Lower U.S. tariffs could help Indian textiles and labour-intensive exports gain competitiveness.
  • Expands Indian business presence in the world’s largest economy.
  • However, benefits may be diluted as the U.S. signed a similar deal with Bangladesh, giving its textiles duty-free access — a comparative trade dimension discussed in UPSC online coaching.

Concerns for India

  • Farmers’ Interests – No clear protection for cereals and sensitive crops, raising fears of U.S. agribusiness entry.
  • GM Food Imports – India agreed to address U.S. “long-standing concerns,” possibly opening doors to genetically modified food products.
  • Unequal Tariff Structure – India removed barriers, but the U.S. still imposes 18% tariffs (much higher than the pre-2025 average of 2.5%).
  • Sovereignty Issues – The U.S. retains the right to re-impose tariffs if India resumes Russian oil imports, raising questions of external influence over India’s trade decisions — a debate relevant for civils coaching in Hyderabad aspirants.

Conclusion

  • The interim India–U.S. trade deal provides short-term market access gains but raises serious doubts about fairness, farmer protection, and sovereignty. For India, ensuring clear safeguards in the final agreement — especially on agriculture and independent policy space — will be crucial to balance economic opportunities with national interests and food security

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👉 Daily Current Affairs – 16th February 2026

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