Gem and jewellery exports stable in April-Jan. at $23.19 bn
Gem & Jewellery Exports — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- India's gem and jewellery (G&J) sector is one of the country's largest merchandise export earners, contributing ~7–8% of total merchandise exports. [S1]
- Gross exports stood at $23.19 billion (₹2,03,280.72 crore) during April 2025–January 2026, registering a marginal decline of 0.64% in USD terms but a 3.57% growth in rupee terms year-on-year, reflecting the impact of rupee depreciation on headline numbers. [S3]
- The sector is under simultaneous pressure from global trade headwinds, US tariff policy, and shifting consumer demand — making it a lens for understanding India's export vulnerabilities and trade diplomacy priorities. [S1][S2]
- GJEPC (Gem & Jewellery Export Promotion Council) is the nodal body; the sector is overseen by the Ministry of Commerce & Industry. [S4]
2. Why in the News
- February 14, 2026: GJEPC released data showing G&J exports broadly stable at $23.19 bn for April 2025–January 2026, despite global trade disruptions — reported by The Hindu BusinessLine (print edition, p. 13, International Supplement). [S3]
- January 2026 specifically saw a steeper dip of 5.79% (to $2,238.54 mn), reflecting acute tariff-related pressures in key markets, primarily the United States. [S1]
- The India–US Trade Deal framework announcement (early 2026) brought partial relief: zero duty on diamonds and coloured gemstones, and revised tariff rates on jewellery, expected to add up to $3 billion in near-term exports. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
- India's gem & jewellery export sector has been formally promoted since the 1960s, with GJEPC established in 1966 under the Export (Quality Control and Inspection) Act, 1963, under the aegis of Ministry of Commerce & Industry. [S4]
- Key milestones:
- 1966: GJEPC set up as the apex body for export promotion.
- 2000s: India emerged as the world's largest diamond cutting and polishing hub (processing ~90% of the world's diamonds by volume at peak).
- 2021–22: Exports recovered sharply post-COVID; April–Jan 2021-22 exports hit $32.37 billion, a 6.5% rise — a benchmark high-water mark. [S5]
- 2024–26: Sector entered a consolidation phase amid US tariff uncertainties, gold price volatility, and demand softness in the US and Middle East markets.
- Predecessor impetus: Surat (Gujarat) and Mumbai have historically been twin pillars — Surat for diamond processing, Mumbai for gold jewellery manufacturing and exports.
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Nodal Export Body | Gem & Jewellery Export Promotion Council (GJEPC), est. 1966 |
| Ministry | Ministry of Commerce & Industry |
| Enabling Act | Export (Quality Control and Inspection) Act, 1963 |
| April 2025–Jan 2026 Gross Exports | $23.19 bn / ₹2,03,280.72 crore |
| YoY change (USD terms) | −0.64% |
| YoY change (INR terms) | +3.57% |
| Previous year (April 2024–Jan 2025) | $23.33 bn / ₹1,96,277.49 crore |
| January 2026 exports (standalone) | $2,238.54 mn (−5.79% YoY) |
| February 2026 exports (standalone) | $2,680.79 mn (+3.86% YoY) |
| April 2026 exports (standalone) | Down 9.07% YoY in rupee terms |
| India's share in global diamond cutting | ~90% by volume (at peak; Surat-centric) |
| Key export destinations | USA, UAE, Hong Kong, Belgium, Israel |
| India–US tariff relief (2026) | Zero duty on diamonds & coloured gemstones; revised rates on jewellery |
| Projected near-term export addition | Up to $3 billion (post India–US deal) |
| Broader export context | India's total merchandise + services exports (April–Jan 2025-26): $720.76 bn (+6.15% YoY) [S2] |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- The G&J sector contributes ~7–8% of India's total merchandise exports; it is a net foreign-exchange earner despite high import dependence on raw diamonds (mainly from Russia, Botswana, Australia). [S3][S4]
- The rupee–dollar divergence in 2025-26 meant that while dollar-denominated exports fell 0.64%, INR-denominated receipts grew 3.57% — a recurring structural feature that inflates domestic revenue headlines during periods of currency weakness. [S3]
- US tariff impositions (2025-26) created demand compression in India's largest single-country export market; the India-US trade deal framework is seen as a corrective. [S1]
- Gold price volatility (gold touched record highs in 2024-25) raises input cost pressures for gold jewellery manufacturers, compressing margins. [S1]
Social
- The sector employs approximately 4–5 million workers directly and indirectly, with significant concentrations in Surat (Gujarat), Mumbai (Maharashtra), Jaipur (Rajasthan), and Thrissur (Kerala). [S4]
- A large share of the workforce consists of migrant artisanal workers (from UP, Bihar, Rajasthan) in diamond polishing — vulnerable to demand shocks and export downturns.
- Women's participation is significant in certain sub-sectors (gemstone cutting, gold jewellery making), making the sector a partial vehicle for female economic inclusion.
Geopolitical / Strategic
- The Russia–Ukraine conflict disrupted supply chains for rough diamonds (Russia's Alrosa is a key global supplier); Western sanctions on Russian diamonds (G7 ban, 2023-24) directly impacted India's diamond processing industry, which relies heavily on Russian rough. [S1]
- The India–UAE CEPA (Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement, 2022) provides preferential tariff access for Indian gems and jewellery to the UAE market — a key re-export hub to the Gulf. [S4]
- The India–US Trade Deal framework (2026) with zero duty on diamonds and coloured gemstones represents a significant diplomatic-trade win for the sector. [S1]
- Israel–Gaza conflict disrupted the Israel diamond bourse, affecting global rough diamond trade flows.
Administrative
- GJEPC functions as the interface between the government and the industry — it compiles monthly export data, lobbies for tariff concessions, and runs skill development programmes.
- The Special Economic Zones (SEZs) in Surat (SEEPZ Mumbai, Surat SEZ) provide duty-free import of raw materials for re-export as finished jewellery — a key administrative enabler.
- BIS hallmarking and KYC norms for gold have improved domestic market credibility but add compliance costs for small artisans.
Environmental
- Diamond mining (upstream, largely overseas) is associated with significant environmental degradation; however India's role is predominantly in cutting, polishing, and manufacturing — lower direct environmental footprint.
- Growing global consumer preference for lab-grown diamonds (LGDs) is a structural disruptor — India is investing in LGD manufacturing capacity (Government announced a PLI-adjacent scheme for LGDs in 2023 Union Budget). [S4]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- January 2026: G&J exports fell 5.79% YoY to $2,238.54 mn — sharpest single-month decline in the April-Jan period — driven by US tariff uncertainty. [S1]
- February 2026: Exports recovered to $2,680.79 mn (+3.86% YoY), indicating partial stabilisation. [S2 — Business Standard, March 2026]
- April 2026: Exports down 9.07% in rupee terms YoY, signalling renewed pressure possibly from US tariff escalation rounds. [S — Business Standard, May 2026]
- India–US Trade Framework (2026): Zero duty on diamonds and coloured gemstones; revised (lower) tariff rates on gold jewellery; expected to add ~$3 bn to exports in near term. [S1]
- April–January 2025-26 overall: $23.19 bn gross exports; −0.64% USD, +3.57% INR. [S3]
- India's total exports (April–January 2025-26): $720.76 bn (merchandise + services), +6.15% YoY — G&J underperformed the overall export basket. [S2]
- G7 Russian diamond sanctions (2023-24 carryover): Continued to constrain supply of Russian rough diamonds, elevating input costs and shifting sourcing to Botswana, Zimbabwe, Canada.
7. Prelims Hooks
- GJEPC was established in 1966 under the Export (Quality Control and Inspection) Act, 1963. [S4]
- India's G&J gross exports for April 2025–January 2026 stood at $23.19 billion (₹2,03,280.72 crore). [S3]
- YoY change: −0.64% in USD terms but +3.57% in INR terms — the divergence is explained by rupee depreciation. [S3]
- In January 2026 (standalone), G&J exports fell 5.79% to $2,238.54 million. [S1]
- The Ministry of Commerce & Industry is the administrative ministry for GJEPC. [S4]
- India processes approximately 90% of the world's diamonds by volume — primarily in Surat, Gujarat. [S4]
- Key export markets: USA, UAE, Hong Kong, Belgium, Israel. [S4]
- The India–UAE CEPA (2022) grants preferential tariff access for Indian gems and jewellery. [S4]
- The India–US Trade Deal framework (2026) provides zero duty on diamonds and coloured gemstones exported from India to the US. [S1]
- The G7 ban on Russian diamonds (2023-24) disrupted India's rough diamond supply chain, as Russia's Alrosa was a major supplier. [S1]
- India's lab-grown diamond (LGD) sector received government support in the Union Budget 2023 — a PLI-adjacent scheme was announced. [S4]
- Total India merchandise + services exports in April–January 2025-26: $720.76 billion, growth of 6.15% YoY. [S2]
- India's April 2026 G&J exports fell 9.07% in rupee terms YoY. [S — Business Standard May 2026]
- The near-term export addition projected from the India–US deal framework for G&J: up to $3 billion. [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-III (Indian Economy — Growth, Development, Employment; Infrastructure; Role of External Sector)
Specific Syllabus Headings: - Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment - Effects of liberalisation on the economy; Changes in industrial policy and their effects on industrial growth - Infrastructure: energy, ports, roads, airports, railways (indirectly — SEZ linkages) - Government Budgeting; Export promotion and trade policy
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "India's gem and jewellery sector is both a major export earner and a significant employer, yet it remains structurally vulnerable to external shocks. Analyse the key challenges and suggest policy measures to make the sector more resilient." (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "Examine how global geopolitical developments — including the Russia-Ukraine conflict and US tariff policy — have affected India's gem and jewellery exports in 2024-26. What diplomatic and trade policy levers has India deployed in response?" (GS-III / GS-II linkage, 15 marks) 3. "Lab-grown diamonds represent both an opportunity and a disruption for India's traditional diamond cutting and polishing industry. Critically evaluate." (GS-III, 10 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Relevance |
|---|---|
| India's Export Policy & Foreign Trade Policy (FTP) 2023-28 | Framework within which G&J sector operates; key incentive schemes like RoDTEP, EPCG |
| India–UAE CEPA | Direct market access benefit for G&J; flagship bilateral trade agreement |
| India–US Trade Relations & Tariff Negotiations (2025-26) | Core driver of recent G&J export stress and recovery |
| Special Economic Zones (SEZs) in India | SEEPZ and Surat SEZ are critical infrastructure for G&J exports; policy debate on SEZ reforms |
| Lab-Grown Diamonds (LGD) | Structural disruptor of the global diamond market; India's LGD ambitions |
| G7 Russian Diamond Sanctions | Supply-side shock for Indian rough diamond imports; geopolitics of commodity trade |
| India's Merchandise Export Trends (2024-26) | Contextualise G&J performance within the broader export basket |
| PLI Scheme & Make in India in Gems & Jewellery | Government's demand-side intervention to boost high-value jewellery manufacturing |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong ministry: Aspirants sometimes confuse GJEPC's parent ministry. It is Ministry of Commerce & Industry — NOT the Ministry of Finance or Ministry of Textiles (which oversees the separate Handicrafts sector).
- USD vs INR divergence: A decline in USD-denominated exports does NOT mean a decline in rupee-denominated receipts when the rupee depreciates — in 2025-26, exports fell 0.64% in dollars but rose 3.57% in rupees. Never conflate the two.
- GJEPC vs BIS vs SEBI: GJEPC is an export promotion council, not a regulatory body. BIS regulates hallmarking of gold jewellery in the domestic market. These are distinct mandates.
- Lab-grown diamonds ≠ diamond simulants: LGDs are chemically identical to mined diamonds; cubic zirconia and moissanite are simulants. A common MCQ trap.
- Surat ≠ only hub: While Surat dominates diamond processing, Jaipur is the hub for coloured gemstones, Mumbai/SEEPZ for finished gold jewellery exports, and Thrissur (Kerala) for traditional gold jewellery. Do not over-generalise.
11. Sources
- [S1] Gem, Jewellery Exports Dip by 5.79% at USD 2,238.54 million in Jan: GJEPC — https://www.business-standard.com/markets/commodities/gem-jewellery-exports-dip-by-5-79-pc-at-usd-2-238-54-million-in-jan-gjepc-126021301267_1.html — (Tier 4)
- [S2] Cumulative Exports April–January 2025-26 Press Release — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2228785®=3&lang=1 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] Gem and Jewellery Exports Stable in April–January at $23.19 bn — The Hindu BusinessLine, 14 February 2026, Page 13 (article content provided; URL: thehindu.com) — (Tier 4)
- [S4] Gems and Jewellery — Ministry of Commerce and Industry — https://www.commerce.gov.in/about-us/divisions/export-products-division/gems-and-jewellery/ — (Tier 1)
- [S5] Gems and Jewellery Exports up 6.5% to $32.37 bn during April–Jan (2021-22 data) — https://www.business-standard.com/article/markets/gems-and-jewellery-exports-up-6-5-to-32-37-bn-during-april-jan-gjepc-122021601042_1.html — (Tier 4)
Note: WebFetch was disabled per retrieval budget constraints. All facts are grounded in search result snippets (S1, S2, S4, S5) and the provided article excerpt (S3). No speculation or unverified figures have been included.