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India-USA announce trade deal framework, final signing expected mid-March 2026

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India and the United States issued a landmark joint statement outlining the framework for an Interim Trade Agreement. This pact represents a major “reset” in bilateral relations, following a year of intense trade friction and high-stakes negotiations between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Donald Trump.

The agreement serves as a stepping stone toward a more comprehensive Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA), which is expected to be formally signed in March 2026.


1. The “18% Tariff” Breakthrough

The most immediate and significant outcome is the sharp reduction in US tariffs on Indian exports.

  • Effective Cut: US reciprocal tariffs on Indian goods have been slashed from a peak of nearly 50% down to 18%.
  • Removal of Punitive Dues: This includes the removal of the 25% “punitive” surcharge that had been imposed in August 2025 due to India’s continued purchase of Russian oil.
  • Competitive Edge: At 18%, India now enjoys a lower tariff rate than several regional competitors, including China (30–35%), Vietnam (20%), and Bangladesh (20%), specifically in labor-intensive sectors like textiles, footwear, and leather.

2. Sector-Specific Gains: “Zero-Duty” Items

Once the interim agreement is fully implemented, several of India’s high-value export engines will enter the US market duty-free:

  • Generic Pharmaceuticals: A major win for India’s “pharmacy of the world” status.
  • Gems & Jewelry: Scrapping tariffs on diamonds and gemstones will boost MSME clusters in Gujarat and Maharashtra.
  • Aerospace & Auto: The US is removing “national security” tariffs on Indian aircraft parts and providing preferential quotas for automotive components.

3. India’s Commitments: “Mission 500”

In exchange for the tariff rollback, India has made massive commercial and strategic commitments:

  • $500 Billion Purchase Plan: India intends to purchase $500 billion worth of US goods over the next five years, including energy (LNG/Crude), aircraft, technology, precious metals, and coking coal.
  • The Energy Pivot: India has reportedly committed to phasing out or significantly reducing its dependence on Russian crude oil, pivoting instead to US and potentially Venezuelan supplies.
  • Agricultural Access: India will lower tariffs on specific US farm products like tree nuts, fresh fruit, soybean oil, and premium wine/spirits, while maintaining “red line” protections for staples like rice, wheat, and dairy.

4. Tech & Defense: The “TRUST” Framework

The trade deal effectively upgrades the earlier iCET initiative into a new industrial execution framework called TRUST (Transforming the Relationship Utilizing Strategic Technology).

  • Semiconductors: Joint investment in a national-security fab to produce gallium nitride chips.
  • AI Infrastructure: Massive trade expansion in GPUs and data center hardware to build India’s AI capacity.
  • Defense Co-production: Formalizing the manufacturing of GE F414 jet engines and V-BAT drones within India.

5. Addressing Non-Tariff Barriers

Both nations have agreed to a six-month window to resolve long-standing regulatory “irritants”:

  • Medical Devices: Streamlining import licensing for US medical technology.
  • ICT Goods: Eliminating restrictive licenses for American Information and Communication Technology products.
  • Standards Alignment: Discussing mutually acceptable standards to ensure ease of compliance for exporters on both sides.

Conclusion: A Transactional Triumph

The 2026 framework is being hailed by the Indian government as a “fair, equitable, and balanced” deal that secures India’s place in global supply chains. While critics point to the “transactional” nature of the energy pivot, the immediate 32% drop in tariffs has provided a much-needed boost to Indian manufacturing and investor sentiment.

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