The evolving nature of trade agreements

Now I have sufficient grounded facts from Tier 1 (pib.gov.in, mea.gov.in) and Tier 2 (wto.org, oecd.org) sources, plus the article excerpt. Here is the UPSC study note:


The Evolving Nature of Trade Agreements

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note | GS-II & GS-III


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Period Milestone
1947 GATT (General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade) signed — established MFN (Most-Favoured-Nation) as the foundational non-discrimination rule [S4]
1947 GATT Article XXIV created as a formal exception to MFN, permitting FTAs/Customs Unions if they cover "substantially all trade" and do not raise tariffs on outsiders [S8]
1995 WTO replaced GATT; its dispute-settlement body became the apex mechanism for trade disputes [S4]
1990s–2000s Proliferation of bilateral FTAs (India-ASEAN, India-Japan, India-Korea, CEFTA, NAFTA/USMCA, etc.) — all nominally GATT Article XXIV-compliant
2017–2018 Trump 1.0 imposed Section 232 (steel/aluminium) and Section 301 (China) tariffs — early stress on multilateral trade rules
2025–2026 Trump 2.0 launched ARTs — a new third typology; framed as "reciprocal" but imposed under coercive tariff threats, raising WTO legality questions [S1]

Predecessors: GATT 1947 → Uruguay Round (1986–1994) → WTO 1995 → Regional Trade Agreements (RTAs) → Mega-regionals (TPP/RCEP) → ARTs.


4. Core Static Facts

Three Typologies of Modern Trade Agreements [S1]:

Category Full Form Nature WTO Status
Multilateral WTO/GATT All 166 WTO members bound; non-discriminatory Fully compliant
FTA / PTA Free Trade Agreement / Preferential Trade Agreement Bilateral or regional; GATT Art. XXIV exception applies Compliant if conditions met
ART Agreement on Reciprocal Trade Trump-era bilateral; not grounded in WTO framework Legally suspicious [S1]

Key WTO Principles [S4, S8]: - MFN (Article I, GATT): Any trade favour granted to one WTO member must be extended to all members unconditionally. - National Treatment (Article III): Imported goods must be treated no less favourably than domestic goods post-border. - Article XXIV exception: FTAs allowed if they cover "substantially all trade," achieve near-free trade among parties, and do not raise barriers against third-party WTO members. [S8]

India-US BTA Key Numbers [S3]: - Launched: February 13, 2025 (Trump-Modi joint statement) - Interim framework: February 2026 - Tariff reduction: 50% → 18% on USD 30.94 bn of Indian exports; 50% → 0% on USD 10.03 bn - Overall US tariff on Indian exports reduced to ~18%

India-US Trade Framework Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Commerce and Industry (Dept. of Commerce); external political interface via Ministry of External Affairs [S2, S9]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Historical

Administrative / Governance


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. GATT was signed in 1947 and replaced by WTO in 1995. [S4]
  2. The Most-Favoured-Nation (MFN) rule is embedded in Article I of GATT 1994. [S8]
  3. GATT Article XXIV is the legal basis permitting Free Trade Agreements as exceptions to MFN. [S8]
  4. An FTA under Article XXIV must cover "substantially all trade" and must not raise external tariffs on non-members. [S8]
  5. Trump-era bilateral deals are officially termed Agreements on Reciprocal Trade (ART) — distinct from FTAs. [S1]
  6. The India-US BTA (Bilateral Trade Agreement) was launched on February 13, 2025 via a Trump-Modi joint statement. [S3]
  7. Under the Feb 2026 interim framework, the US reduced tariffs on USD 30.94 bn of Indian exports from 50% to 18%. [S3]
  8. Under the same framework, tariffs on another USD 10.03 bn of Indian exports were reduced to zero. [S3]
  9. USTR proposed 12.5% additional duty on India citing forced-labour compliance gaps (June 2026). [S7]
  10. The WTO dispute settlement mechanism is the primary venue for challenging ART-style coercive tariffs by WTO members. [S4]
  11. ARTs are considered "legally suspicious" because they are not grounded in the GATT/WTO framework. [S1]
  12. India's BTA negotiations are administratively led by the Department of Commerce, Ministry of Commerce and Industry. [S9]
  13. The three typologies of modern trade agreements are: Multilateral (WTO), FTA/PTA, and ART. [S1]
  14. Section 122 of the U.S. Trade Act (balance-of-payments tariffs) and reciprocal tariffs were struck down by U.S. courts in 2026. [S5]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-II (International Relations — bilateral/multilateral groupings, India's foreign policy) and GS-III (Indian Economy — trade, WTO).

Syllabus headings: - GS-II: Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India's interests - GS-III: Indian economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment; effects of liberalisation on the economy

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The emergence of Agreements on Reciprocal Trade (ART) under U.S. President Trump represents a fundamental challenge to the WTO-based multilateral trading order. Critically examine." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "Distinguish between a Free Trade Agreement and an Agreement on Reciprocal Trade. What are the legal and strategic implications for India of signing a Bilateral Trade Agreement with the United States outside the WTO framework?" (GS-II/GS-III, 15 marks) 3. "How does GATT Article XXIV reconcile the Most-Favoured-Nation principle with the proliferation of preferential trade agreements? Assess its adequacy in the current era of geo-economic statecraft." (GS-III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
WTO — Structure, Dispute Settlement, Doha Round Foundational framework within which all agreements operate; ART validity depends on WTO law
India's FTA Strategy (ASEAN, Japan, Korea, EU, UK) Direct contrast to ART model; reveals India's negotiating priorities and defensive interests
Non-Tariff Barriers (NTBs) and Sanitary/Phytosanitary (SPS) Measures Key sticking points in India-US and India-EU FTA talks
Most-Favoured-Nation (MFN) vs National Treatment Core WTO disciplines tested in Prelims and as conceptual base for Mains
U.S. Trade Policy — Section 232, Section 301, Section 122 Legal instruments through which U.S. coercion is operationalised in ARTs
India's Export Policy & PLI Schemes Supply-side response to trade opportunities opened by FTAs/BTAs
Regional Trade Agreements — RCEP, CPTPP, USMCA Mega-regional context; India's decision to exit RCEP is directly relevant

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. ART ≠ FTA: Aspirants confuse Trump's ARTs with standard FTAs. ARTs are not WTO-notified, not GATT Article XXIV-compliant, and rest on coercive tariff threats — not genuine reciprocity.
  2. MFN ≠ Most Favourable Treatment: MFN means equal treatment for all WTO members, not the best possible treatment. The two are often conflated.
  3. GATT Article XXIV allows FTAs — not all PTAs unconditionally: The exception has strict conditions (substantially all trade; no increase in external tariffs). Many aspirants treat Article XXIV as a blanket FTA permission.
  4. WTO replaced GATT but GATT 1994 is still operative: GATT 1994 is an annexure to the WTO Agreement — both GATT and WTO rules coexist. "GATT no longer exists" is a trap answer.
  5. India-US BTA is not yet finalised (as of June 2026): Only an interim framework has been announced; treat the BTA as under negotiation, not concluded, in answers. The India-UK FTA (IFTA) is similarly a common confusion — at varying stages of finalisation.

11. Sources


Sources: - United States-India Joint Statement — PIB - India's Trade Partnerships — PIB - WTO Principles of the Trading System - WTO GATT Article XXIV - MEA Bilateral Documents - India-US court setbacks — Business Standard - India-US BTA reaffirmed — Business Standard - USTR forced-labour duty — Business Standard