India–US Trade Deal 2026: Tariff Reduction to 18%

Why in News

The United States has lowered tariffs on Indian exports to 18%, down from an effective rate of nearly 50% that had included punitive duties. The move marks a de-escalation of bilateral trade tensions and underscores India’s growing strategic relevance to the US in the Indo-Pacific. It also reflects a broader geopolitical realignment driven by supply-chain diversification and energy security considerations.


Key Features of the India–US Trade Understanding

Tariff Rationalisation

  • The US reduced the reciprocal tariff from 25% to 18%.
  • The additional 25% punitive duty imposed in August 2025 over India’s Russian oil imports has been withdrawn.
  • The effective tariff burden has fallen from around 50% to 18%, restoring competitiveness for Indian exports.

India’s Commitments

  • Energy Rebalancing: Gradual reduction in dependence on Russian crude, with higher imports from the US and potentially Venezuela.
  • Market Access: Possible reduction of tariffs and non-tariff barriers on selected US products, including near-zero duties in specific sectors.
  • Large-Scale Procurement: Prospective purchases of up to USD 500 billion worth of US energy, agricultural, coal, and technology products.
  • Buy-American Tilt: Increased preference for US suppliers in large public and industrial procurements.

Evolution of Tariff Tensions

  • The US has long criticised India’s tariff structure, often branding it a “high-tariff” economy.
  • Mid-2025: A 25% reciprocal tariff was imposed to match India’s average import duties.
  • August 2025: An additional 25% punitive duty followed India’s continued imports of Russian oil.

India’s pre-deal confidence-building measures included:

  • Selective duty reductions (e.g., heavy motorcycles, bourbon whisky).
  • Enactment of the SHANTI Act, 2025, opening the nuclear sector to private participation.

These steps helped ease trade frictions and pave the way for the current agreement.


India–US Trade Snapshot

  • Bilateral trade (FY25): USD 132 billion (up from USD 119.7 billion in FY24).
  • India’s trade surplus: USD 40.82 billion.

Major US exports to India:

  • Mineral fuels and oils
  • Nuclear reactors and machinery
  • Electrical equipment

Major Indian exports to the US:

  • Electrical machinery
  • Pharmaceuticals
  • Gems and jewellery
  • Iron and steel products

The US is India’s third-largest investor, with cumulative FDI of USD 70.65 billion (2000–2025).


Strategic Architecture of the Partnership

  • US–India COMPACT (2025): Focuses on military cooperation, commerce, and technology.
  • Mission 500: Target to raise bilateral trade to USD 500 billion by 2030.
  • Ongoing negotiations for a Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA).

Significance of the Tariff Cut

For India

  • Export Boost: Enhanced competitiveness for textiles, pharmaceuticals, gems, and engineering goods.
  • Relative Advantage: Lower tariffs than Vietnam and Bangladesh (~20%) and significantly below China (30–35%).
  • Macroeconomic Stability: Reduced trade uncertainty, supporting currency stability and investment inflows.
  • Friend-shoring Gains: Strengthens India’s position as an alternative manufacturing hub amid global supply-chain reconfiguration.

For the United States

  • Energy Exports: India’s high import dependence (88.2% in FY25) makes it a reliable long-term market.
  • Nuclear and Defence Access: Enabled by regulatory reforms under the SHANTI Act.
  • Technology Collaboration: Expanded scope under iCET, including semiconductors and AI.
  • Digital Infrastructure: Tax incentives support US investments in data centres and AI ecosystems.

Key Challenges

Strategic Autonomy

  • Reduced Russian oil imports could strain long-standing ties with Moscow.
  • Raises questions about India’s multi-alignment strategy.

Transactional Trade Diplomacy

  • Reciprocal tariff matching reflects a quid-pro-quo model, linking strategic cooperation with economic concessions.

Risk of Chinese Retaliation

  • China has signalled potential countermeasures.
  • India remains vulnerable due to dependence on Chinese rare earths and pharmaceutical APIs.

Domestic Economic Pressures

  • Opening dairy and poultry markets to subsidised US products could affect farmers.
  • Higher energy import costs may widen the current account deficit.

Regulatory and Digital Frictions

  • Stringent US SPS norms restrict Indian agri-exports.
  • Pressure on intellectual property norms may raise healthcare costs.
  • Tensions persist over data localisation versus free data flows.

Way Forward: Leveraging the Trade Pivot

  • Safeguard Energy Security: Scale renewables, green hydrogen, and nuclear power.
  • Export Diversification: Accelerate FTAs with the Gulf and East Asia to avoid over-dependence.
  • Targeted Protection: Use calibrated safeguards instead of broad tariff cuts.
  • Manufacturing Deepening: Shift from assembly to value-added manufacturing under Make in India.
  • Innovation Partnerships: Collaborate in AI, semiconductors, and space while protecting public-interest sectors.
  • Farmer Protection: Focus on processed and high-value agricultural exports.

Conclusion

The reduction of US tariffs to 18% offers India a strategic opportunity to enhance export competitiveness and integrate into reconfigured global supply chains. However, sustaining long-term gains will require careful balancing of trade openness with strategic autonomy, protection of domestic sectors, and the creation of a resilient manufacturing ecosystem aligned with the vision of Viksit Bharat.

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