The Grand Bargain: New Delhi and
Washington’s Economic Reset
R Kannan
The announcement in early February 2026 of the India-US
Interim Trade Agreement (ITA) has sent shockwaves through the global trade
order. Not merely a reduction in levies, this "Grand Bargain"
represents a fundamental realignment of the world’s fifth and first-largest
economies. By slashing the effective US tariff on Indian goods from nearly 50%
to a baseline of 18%, the two nations have signalled an end to the
"Reciprocal War" of 2025 and the birth of a strategic
"friend-shoring" axis.
Likely Impact
The "Export Buffer": Widening the Trade Surplus
India historically enjoys a trade surplus with the US ($45.7
billion in 2024). The reduction of tariffs to 18% is expected to act as a major
"buffer" for the CAD.
- Competitiveness
Gain: By
slashing tariffs from 50%, Indian exports in labour-intensive sectors
(textiles, leather) are projected to grow by 15–20% annually.
- Inflow
Surge:
Economists at Elara Capital suggest that the increased export volume could
add $12–15 billion in annual foreign exchange inflows, helping to
offset the rising import costs.
The "Sting" in the Tail: The Energy Import Bill
The commitment to stop purchasing discounted Russian crude is
the most significant risk to the CAD.
- The
Russian Subsidy:
Between 2023 and 2025, India saved an estimated $15–$25 per barrel
by buying Russian oil.
- The
Fiscal Gap:
Shifting to US shale oil or Brent-indexed crude from the Gulf could
increase India's annual oil import bill by $8–$12 billion.
- CAD
Impact: Since
oil represents roughly 25-30% of India's total imports, a 10% rise in
energy sourcing costs could widen the CAD by 0.4% to 0.6% of GDP if
not balanced by export growth.
Strategic Imports vs. Consumption Imports
The $500 billion commitment is not merely for consumer goods
but for capital-intensive infrastructure inputs.
- Productive
Debt: A large
portion of the $500 billion is earmarked for commercial aircraft
(Boeing), LNG terminals, and nuclear technology (under the SHANTI Act).
- Long-term
Yield: Unlike
consumption-led imports, these are "investment imports" that
enhance India’s long-term material capability. While they spike the CAD in
the short term, they are often financed by long-term credit, reducing the
immediate pressure on the Rupee.
The Verdict
The 2026 framework is a "Front-Loaded Risk" for
the CAD. India will likely face a wider deficit in 2026-2027 as it pays higher
prices for US energy and aircraft. However, by 2028, the "multiplier
effect" of cheaper US industrial inputs and the surge in "Made in
India" exports to the US is expected to stabilize the CAD back toward a
sustainable 1.5% to 2% of GDP.
Reduction of Reciprocal Tariffs
The cornerstone of this agreement is the reduction of the "Reciprocal
Tariff" from roughly 50% to a baseline of 18%.
- Context: Following a period of trade
friction where the US applied "reciprocal" duties to counter
India’s high import taxes, this move restores parity.
- Impact: This dramatically improves the
landed cost of Indian goods in the US. Major beneficiaries include labour-intensive
sectors such as textiles, apparel, leather, footwear, and artisanal
products.
- Scale: Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal
noted this opens a $30 trillion market for Indian MSMEs,
potentially creating lakhs of new jobs.
Removal of Russian Oil Penalty
In 2025, the US had imposed a specific 25% penal tariff
on Indian imports as a deterrent against India’s continued purchase of Russian
crude oil during the Ukraine conflict.
- The
Shift: Under
the new framework, President Trump signed an executive order to eliminate
this penalty immediately.
- Strategic
Meaning: This
signifies a US acceptance of India’s "energy security"
priorities while incentivizing a shift toward US energy sources .
Protection of Sensitive Agriculture
India successfully defended its "Red Lines"
regarding staple food security.
- Shielded
Crops: There
will be no duty concessions or increased quotas for wheat, rice,
maize, sugar, or pulses.
- Calibrated
Access: While
India will allow some US agricultural products (like tree nuts, fresh
fruits, and soybean oil), these are strictly categorized to ensure they do
not compete with domestic staples that support millions of smallholders.
Exclusion of Dairy Sector
The dairy sector was a "non-negotiable" point for
the Indian Ministry of Commerce.
- The
Rationale: With
over 80 million rural households dependent on dairy, India refused
to allow any imports of US milk, cheese, or butter.
- Cultural
Concerns: India
maintained its stance on "source-based" certification (ensuring
animals are not fed internal organs), which the US dairy industry has
historically struggled to meet.
Market Access for US Industrial Goods
In exchange for the 18% tariff cap, India has agreed to eliminate
or significantly reduce duties on nearly all US industrial products.
- Iconic
Brands:
High-end machinery and lifestyle products, including Harley-Davidson
motorcycles, will see substantial price drops in the Indian market.
- Manufacturing
Inputs:
Lowering these tariffs also benefits Indian manufacturers who rely on
high-tech American components for their "Make in India" assembly
lines.
Purchase Commitment of $500 Billion
India has pledged to buy $500 billion worth of
American goods over the next five years.
- Sector
Focus: This is
not a "gift" but a strategic procurement plan focusing on LNG
(Liquid Natural Gas), coking coal, commercial aircraft (Boeing), and
precious metals.
- Energy
Shift: This
commitment helps bridge the trade deficit while gradually reducing India's
reliance on energy imports from volatile regions.
Tech Cooperation (GPUs and AI)
A forward-looking element of the deal involves high-end
computing hardware.
- GPU
Access: The US
has agreed to ease export controls on Graphics Processing Units
(Nvidia/AMD chips), which are critical for India’s National AI
Mission.
- Data
Centres: India
will provide better market access for US firms to set up and equip massive
data centres, which are the backbone of the "Viksit Bharat"
digital economy.
Generic Pharmaceuticals
The US has agreed to "negotiated outcomes" for the
Indian pharma sector, which is the "Pharmacy of the World."
- Regulatory
Relief: This
involves streamlining the US FDA inspection processes and resolving
long-standing litigation under the Section 232 investigation on
pharmaceutical ingredients.
- Market
Flow: It
ensures that affordable Indian generics can continue to flow into the US
healthcare system without facing sudden "national security"
tariffs.
Section 232 Relief (Steel & Aluminium)
The framework provides specific relief for the aerospace
sector.
- Aircraft
Parts: The US
will remove the "national security" tariffs (previously 25%)
specifically for Indian aircraft and aircraft parts.
- Remaining
Barriers: It is
important to note that primary steel and aluminium exports may still face
global Section 232 duties, but the relief on "parts" supports
the growing India-US aerospace supply chain.
Auto Parts Quota
India secured a "Preferential Tariff-Rate Quota"
(TRQ) for automotive components.
- How
it works: A
specific volume of Indian-made auto parts can enter the US at zero or
near-zero duty.
- The
Advantage: This
gives Indian auto-ancillary companies (like Bharat Forge) a massive
pricing advantage over competitors from countries that do not have such an
agreement with the US.
Addressing Non-Tariff Barriers (NTBs)
Beyond simple taxes, "hidden" barriers often stall
trade. India has committed to a six-month "Standardization Sprint"
to simplify rules.
- The
Commitment:
India will evaluate whether US-developed or international standards are
acceptable for US exports, reducing the need for redundant domestic
testing.
- Impact: This streamlines the entry of
specialized machinery and chemical products that previously sat in customs
for months due to "non-alignment" of technical regulations.
- Significance: For the first time, India is
providing a fixed timeline (180 days) to harmonize standards, a major win
for the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and
US industry groups.
Medical Devices Access
The medical device sector has been a primary "friction
point" due to India’s aggressive price-capping on stents and knee
implants.
- The
Framework: Both
nations will address "long-standing barriers," which include
high customs duties and the Trade Margin Rationalization (TMR)
policy.
- The
Shift: India is
expected to move toward a more "predictable regulatory
environment" for high-end US medical tech (like MRI machines and
robotic surgical tools) in exchange for better access for Indian generic
pharmaceuticals.
ICT Goods Licensing
In 2023-24, India introduced "import
authorizations" (licensing) for laptops, tablets, and servers to curb
imports, primarily from China.
- The
Resolution:
India will eliminate these restrictive licensing procedures
specifically for US-origin ICT goods.
- Strategic
Rationale:
Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal stated that India needs US-made Nvidia
chips, AI equipment, and data centre hardware to fuel its
"IndiaAI Mission." By removing licenses for US goods, India
secures its tech supply chain while maintaining restrictions on non-market
actors.
Rules of Origin (The "Anti-China" Shield)
To ensure that only India and the US benefit from these lower
tariffs, the agreement introduces rigorous "Rules of Origin".
- The
Mechanism:
Goods must undergo "substantial transformation" within India or
the US to qualify for the 18% tariff.
- Preventing
Round-Tripping:
This prevents third parties (specifically China) from shipping
semi-finished goods to India, doing minimal assembly, and then
"dumping" them into the US market under the Indian preferential
rate.
Energy Security Shift
A pivotal geopolitical component of the deal is India's
commitment to diversify its energy basket.
- The
Pivot: India
intends to significantly increase its purchase of US crude oil, LNG,
and coking coal.
- The
Trade-off: This
serves as a strategic alternative to Russian oil. In exchange for
"security of supply" from the US, India has agreed to reduce its
dependency on Russian energy, which was the trigger for previous US
punitive tariffs.
Textiles and Leather Boost
The reduction of US tariffs to 18% is a "game
changer" for India’s labour-intensive sectors.
- Competitive
Edge: Previously
facing tariffs up to 50%, Indian garments and footwear now have a
significant price advantage over competitors like China (30-35%),
Vietnam (20%), and Bangladesh (20%).
- Employment: The Ministry of Textiles
predicts this will help India reach its $100 billion export target by
2030, specifically boosting employment for women in rural and
semi-urban hubs.
Wine and Spirits Pricing
India has one of the highest protection levels for alcohol,
but this framework opens the door for US labels.
- The
Compromise:
India will lower duties on US wines and spirits but will maintain "Minimum
Import Prices" (MIP).
- The
Goal: This
ensures that only premium US products enter the market, preventing a flood
of cheap liquor that would hurt domestic Indian distilleries and state
excise revenues.
Digital Trade Rules
Digital trade was nearly a "deal-breaker" in
previous years due to India's data localization laws.
- The
Compromise:
Both countries have pledged to address "burdensome practices"
and set a "clear pathway" for digital trade.
- The
Future: While
the Interim Agreement doesn't fully resolve data localization, it
establishes a working group to ensure that cross-border data flows
for US tech giants (Google, Microsoft, Amazon) are balanced with India's
"data sovereignty" needs.
Reciprocity Safeguards
The agreement is built on a "living" principle of
reciprocity.
- The
Clause: If one
country changes its agreed-upon tariffs or introduces new barriers, the
other side has the legal right to modify its own commitments
proportionally.
- Stability: This prevents a
"one-sided" benefit and ensures that both New Delhi and
Washington remain incentivized to keep their markets open.
Countering Non-Market Policies
The framework explicitly mentions cooperation to address the "non-market
policies of third parties."
- The
Target: While
not named, this is a clear reference to China's state-subsidized
dumping.
- The
Action: India
and the US will share intelligence on inbound/outbound investment
reviews and coordinate on export controls to prevent sensitive
technology from reaching "non-aligned" nations.
|
Sector |
Impact Status |
Key Provision |
Primary Reason |
|
Generic Pharma |
Big Winner |
Zero Tariffs |
US removal of Section 232 hurdles and zero duty on exports
dramatically lowers costs for Indian generics. |
|
Gems & Jewellery |
Big Winner |
Zero Tariffs |
Duty-free access for diamonds and jewellery provides a
massive edge over global competitors. |
|
Textiles & Apparel |
Winner |
18% Tariff Cap |
Reduction from ~50% to 18% restores competitiveness against
rivals like Vietnam and Bangladesh. |
|
Aerospace & MRO |
Winner |
Zero Duty / Sec 232 Relief |
Removal of "national security" tariffs on
aircraft parts integrates India into the US aerospace supply chain. |
|
Tech (AI/GPUs) |
Winner |
Strategic Access |
Easing of US export controls on GPUs and high-end AI
hardware fuels India’s digital economy. |
|
Auto Components |
Moderate Winner |
Preferential Quota (TRQ) |
Indian parts get a "special volume" entry at low
duty, though still subject to some security oversight. |
|
US Energy (Oil/LNG) |
Big Winner |
$500B Commitment |
Guaranteed massive procurement by India as it shifts away
from Russian energy reliance. |
|
US Spirits & Wine |
Moderate Winner |
Reduced Duties |
Lower tariffs allow premium US brands (e.g., Napa Valley
wines) to enter the high-end Indian market. |
|
US Medical Devices |
Moderate Winner |
NTB Reforms |
India’s commitment to resolve price-cap and regulatory
"irritants" eases market entry. |
|
Domestic Staples |
Protected |
No Concessions |
Wheat, Rice, Maize, and Dairy remain fully shielded from US
competition. |
|
Indian Healthcare |
Potential Loser |
NTB/Pricing Shifts |
Easing price caps or regulatory hurdles for US devices
could lead to higher costs for specialized treatments. |
|
Third-Party Traders |
Loser |
Rules of Origin |
Strict sourcing rules prevent China/others from using India
as a "backdoor" to the US market. |
Key Takeaway
The agreement is strategically designed to be "Complementary,
not Competitive." * India wins on labour-intensive
manufacturing and high-end services.
- The
US wins on
energy exports, high-tech industrial goods, and a closer strategic
alignment against "non-market" economic powers.
- The
Rural Economy
remains the "shielded" sector, with the Indian government
successfully holding its ground on dairy and staple crops.
The February 2026 India-US Interim Trade Agreement
significantly reshapes the competitive landscape in the American market. By
slashing the effective tariff on Indian goods from nearly 50% to 18%,
India has leapfrogged its primary Asian rivals who previously held a pricing
advantage.
Here is a comparative analysis of how India now positions
itself against its main competitors:
The New Tariff Hierarchy (US Market)
According to the Ministry of Commerce and reports from the Times
of India, India now enjoys one of the most favourable tariff regimes among
major manufacturing hubs.
|
Country |
Effective US Tariff Rate |
Competitive Status vs. India |
|
India |
18% |
Leader |
|
Indonesia |
19% |
Disadvantaged |
|
Vietnam |
20% |
Disadvantaged |
|
Bangladesh |
20% |
Disadvantaged |
|
China |
35% – 47.5% |
Heavily Penalized |
Strategic Advantages over Key Rivals
1. Versus China: The "Supply Chain Alternative"
- Price
Gap: With China
facing tariffs between 35% and 47.5%, Indian products are now
roughly 17% to 30% cheaper on arrival in the US.
- Rules
of Origin: The
strict "Rules of Origin" in the ITA are a targeted strike
against Chinese "round-tripping." It ensures that Chinese
companies cannot simply route goods through India to claim the 18% rate.
- Tech
Trust: Unlike
China, India has gained eased access to US high-end GPUs and AI
hardware, positioning it as the preferred partner for
"friend-shoring" tech manufacturing.
2. Versus Vietnam & Bangladesh: Labor-Intensive Recovery
- Textiles
& Apparel:
Historically, Vietnam and Bangladesh dominated the US market because
India’s effective duties were sky-high. At 18%, India is now 2%
cheaper than its neighbours.
- Margin
Restoration:
Indian exporters previously had to offer 20-30% discounts to stay
relevant under high tariffs. With the new deal, firms like Pearl Global
and the Farida Group are redirecting those "discounted margins"
back into profitability and capacity expansion.
- Leather
& Footwear:
The Indian Shoe Federation predicts a surge in US market share from
22% to nearly 30% this year alone, as Indian factories return to full
six-day work weeks to meet the renewed demand.
3. Versus Other "Emerging Markets"
(Indonesia/Thailand)
- Predictability: While countries like Indonesia
(19%) and Thailand (19%) have similar rates, the $500 billion purchase
commitment by India creates a "structural bond" with the US.
This "transactional stability" makes US buyers more likely to
sign long-term contracts with Indian suppliers over others.
The "India-Plus-One" Momentum
Industry experts, including former G20 Sherpa Amitabh Kant,
have noted that this deal "turbocharges" the China-Plus-One strategy.
- Investment
Shift: Global
giants like Apple and Google, who already have assembly
lines in both India and Vietnam, now have a much stronger fiscal incentive
to prioritize their Indian export hubs for the US market.
- Strategic
Leverage: By
securing the 18% rate, India has essentially built a "tariff
wall" that protects its growth from being undercut by lower-cost
regional neighbours for the remainder of the decade.
Timeline for the Full Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA)
The "Interim Agreement" is a legally binding
"stepping stone." The White House and India's Ministry of
Commerce have outlined a rapid roadmap for the final treaty:
|
Phase |
Estimated Timeline |
Key Focus Area |
|
Interim Implementation |
Feb 7 – Feb 28, 2026 |
Immediate withdrawal of the 25% Russian oil penalty; 18%
tariff takes effect. |
|
Legal Scrubbing |
March 2026 |
Legal teams from MEA and USTR will finalize the formal text
of the 20 issues agreed upon. |
|
BTA Signature |
Mid-March 2026 |
Target Date: Reports suggest a high-profile summit (potentially in New
Delhi) to sign the Full Bilateral Trade Agreement. |
|
Regulatory Harmonization |
August 2026 (6-month mark) |
Review of US testing standards and non-tariff barriers to
finalize market entry rules. |
|
Digital Trade Annex |
Late 2026 |
Finalization of ambitious digital trade rules and
cross-border data flow frameworks. |
The road ahead is fast-tracked. With "legal
scrubbing" scheduled for March, the full Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA)
is expected to be signed within weeks. This phase will tackle the
"last-mile" issues: digital trade rules, data localization, and the
harmonization of technical standards (SPS/TBT).
For global investors, the takeaway is clear. This is no
longer a relationship of "potential," but one of
"performance." By trading energy concessions for manufacturing
survival, India has not only stabilized its currency but positioned itself as
the indispensable alternative to the "non-market policies" of its
northern neighbour. The "Shanti" (Peace) in India’s new nuclear law
may well describe the new economic era: a stable, reciprocal, and high-tech
peace between the world’s oldest and largest democracies.