Caution, not celebration: GTRI on India-US trade deal
0 4 min 2 mths


Caution, not celebration: GTRI on India-US trade deal
India-US trade deal (AI image)

India-US trade deal: Even as US President Donald Trump has announced an immediate reduction in tariff rate on India to 18%, think tank Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI) has struck a cautious note on what the deal could mean for India.In a note post post Trump and PM Narendra Modiโ€™s posts on social media platforms, Ajay Srivastava, founder of GTRI said: Caution, not celebration, is warranted.Trumpโ€™s Truth Social post on the trade deal made several claims; India will stop buying Russian oil, India will step up purchase of US oil, India may buy oil from Venezuela, India has agreed to reduce tariff on US products to 0%, India has agreed to spend $500 billion on US energy, technology etc. None of these claims has been officially confirmed by India.Also Read | Lower than Pakistan, China: In trade deal with US, India secures a favourable tariff rate

India-US Trade Deal: Critical Questions Unanswered

GTRI says that several important questions related to the India-US trade deal remain unanswered. โ€Trump says US tariffs will fall from 25% to 18%. However, since the post also refers to India stopping Russian oil purchasesโ€”linked earlier to punitive tariffsโ€”it is unclear whether the cut is actually from 50% to 18%, or whether Trump misstated the starting tariff level,โ€ says GTRI.Reports quote White House officials saying that the 25% tariff linked to Russian crude will also be removed.The US has already agreed to reciprocal tariff rates of 10% for the UK, 15% for the EU and Japan, 19% for Indonesia and Malaysia, and 20% for Bangladesh and Vietnam under trade agreements concluded between May and October 2025, GTRI notes.Additionally, even after the India-US deal, certain levies will remain unchanged. Section 232 duties of 50% on steel, aluminium, copper and similar products will continue, as will a 25% tariff on select auto components. At the same time, zero-duty treatment will remain in place for pharmaceuticals, aircraft and aircraft parts, as well as some mechanical and electronic items.Trump has claimed that India will eliminate both tariff and non-tariff barriers on American products, but his remarks do not clarify the scope of goods covered by this pledge. โ€œIndia has previously resisted opening sensitive sectors such as food grains, genetically modified products, and other regulated imports,โ€ says GTRI.Trump has also claimed that India will purchase more than $500 billion worth of US goods. Currently, Indiaโ€™s yearly imports of merchandise and energy from the US are below $50 billion.Also Read | India-US trade deal announced by US President Donald Trump; check details โ€œReaching $500 billion would likely require more than 20 years, suggesting the figure refers to a long-term aspiration rather than a near-term commitment,โ€ GTRI adds.According to Ajay Srivastava, India should resist the temptation to celebrate President Trumpโ€™s trade announcement prematurely. โ€œThe headline figure of $500 billion in US purchases also lacks credibility without a timeframe. Indiaโ€™s current annual imports from the US are under $50 billion, suggesting this is, at best, a long-term aspiration rather than a binding obligation,โ€ he says.โ€œTrade deals are serious business. Until there is a joint statement, negotiated text, and clarity on enforceability, this should be treated as a political signalโ€”not a concluded trade deal. Caution, not celebration, is warranted,โ€ he concludes.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *