Where does the India-U.S. trade deal stand?


Where Does the India-U.S. Trade Deal Stand?

UPSC Study Note | GS-II (International Relations) | Current Affairs: 2025–2026


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2019 U.S. terminated India's GSP (Generalised System of Preferences) benefits — first major trade friction
2020–23 TIFA (Trade and Investment Framework Agreement) talks resumed; no major breakthrough
Mid-2025 Trump imposed reciprocal tariffs on most countries, including India, via IEEPA (1977); India faced ~26% reciprocal tariff + 25% "Russian oil penalty tariff" = ~50% combined
Aug 2025 EO 14329 imposed additional 25% tariff on India specifically for importing Russian oil [S2]
Nov 2025 Reports of an interim understanding cutting tariff to ~18% in exchange for agricultural and digital concessions [S2]
Feb 6, 2026 Formal interim agreement framework announced; joint statement issued; EO suspending Russian-oil tariff signed [S2][S5]
Feb 20, 2026 U.S. Supreme Court strikes down IEEPA tariffs (6-3); tariff on Indian goods drops to 10% (residual Section 122 rate) [S1][S3]
June 2026 Finalisation talks resumed; deal awaiting new U.S. global tariff framework [S4][S7]

4. Core Static Facts

Key Legal Instruments (U.S. side) - IEEPA (International Emergency Economic Powers Act, 1977): Gave the President emergency economic powers; used by Trump to impose country-specific "reciprocal tariffs". SCOTUS ruled Feb 20, 2026 it does not authorise tariffs. [S1][S3] - Section 232 (Trade Expansion Act, 1962): National-security-based tariffs on steel (50%), aluminium (50%), copper — these are global, not India-specific; NOT struck down by SCOTUS ruling. [S5][S6] - Section 122 (Trade Act, 1974): Residual 10% tariff that remains on Indian goods post-SCOTUS ruling. [S1]

Key Numbers | Parameter | Figure | |-----------|--------| | India–U.S. bilateral trade volume | ~$190 bn/year | | Peak U.S. tariff on India (mid-2025) | 50% (26% reciprocal + 25% Russian oil penalty) | | Post-Feb 6, 2026 (EO suspension) | 25% | | Post-Interim Agreement (Nov 2025 understanding) | 18% (IEEPA) | | Post-SCOTUS ruling (Feb 20, 2026) | 10% (Section 122 only) | | Steel/Aluminium tariff (Section 232, global) | 50% | | Indian exports benefiting from zero reciprocal duty | ~$44 bn worth (textiles, gems, pharma) | | India's energy purchase commitment (5-year) | $500 bn (energy, aircraft, precious metals, coking coal) |

Key Persons - Piyush Goyal — India's Commerce & Industry Minister, lead negotiator [S6] - Howard Lutnick — U.S. Commerce Secretary [S5]

Indian Constitutional / Statutory Hook - Trade policy falls under Union List, Entry 41 (foreign trade); Ministry of Commerce & Industry (DPIIT + Commerce Dept) leads negotiations. - India has no standalone FTA statute; agreements are executive-led, ratified via domestic legislation where tariff changes are needed.


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The U.S. Supreme Court struck down IEEPA-based tariffs on February 20, 2026, in a 6-3 ruling. [S1][S3]
  2. IEEPA = International Emergency Economic Powers Act, 1977 — used by Trump for reciprocal tariffs until SCOTUS invalidated this use. [S1]
  3. India's peak tariff burden from the U.S. in mid-2025 was 50% (26% reciprocal + 25% Russian oil penalty). [S2]
  4. The additional 25% tariff on India for Russian oil imports was imposed under Executive Order 14329. [S2]
  5. Post-SCOTUS ruling, the residual U.S. tariff on Indian goods is 10% under Section 122 of the Trade Act, 1974. [S1]
  6. Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act, 1962 is the legal basis for 50% U.S. tariffs on steel, aluminium, and copper — these were not struck down. [S6]
  7. India committed to purchasing $500 billion in U.S. goods over 5 years under the interim agreement framework. [S2]
  8. Approximately $44 billion worth of Indian exports (textiles, gems, pharma) stand to benefit from zero reciprocal duty. [S5]
  9. India's lead negotiator is Commerce & Industry Minister Piyush Goyal; U.S. counterpart is Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick. [S5]
  10. The Interim Trade Agreement framework was announced on February 6, 2026 via a joint statement. [S2]
  11. Section 232 tariffs apply globally to all countries, not bilaterally to India alone — Goyal explicitly clarified this. [S6]
  12. India's trade policy is a Union subject (Entry 41, Seventh Schedule); negotiations led by the Ministry of Commerce & Industry. [Constitutional]
  13. The signing of the interim deal is on hold pending a new U.S. global tariff framework following the SCOTUS ruling. [S4][S7]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: Primarily GS-II (International Relations, India's foreign policy, bilateral agreements); secondary GS-III (Indian economy, trade policy, balance of payments).

Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: India and its neighbourhood / relations with developed countries; bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India; effect of policies of developed and developing countries on India's interests - GS-III: Indian economy, trade, mobilisation of resources; effect of liberalisation on the economy

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The U.S. Supreme Court's February 2026 IEEPA ruling has complicated the India-U.S. interim trade deal. Analyse the implications for India's trade diplomacy and WTO commitments." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "India's $500 billion energy purchase commitment to the U.S. raises questions of energy security and strategic autonomy. Critically examine." (GS-II/GS-III, 15 marks) 3. "Section 232 tariffs on steel and aluminium represent a structural challenge for India-U.S. trade normalisation that bilateral deals alone cannot resolve. Discuss." (GS-III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
WTO Dispute Settlement Mechanism India can challenge Section 232 tariffs at WTO; SCOTUS ruling has WTO MFN implications
India's Foreign Trade Policy 2023–28 Framework within which bilateral deals are negotiated; export promotion schemes
Generalised System of Preferences (GSP) U.S. terminated India's GSP in 2019 — precursor to current tariff tensions
IEEPA & U.S. Presidential Trade Powers Understanding the legal landscape post-SCOTUS ruling is essential for interpreting future U.S. trade actions
India-EU Free Trade Agreement (BTIA) Parallel FTA negotiation; similar agricultural access sticking points
India-UK Free Trade Agreement Another bilateral deal nearing finalisation; comparison with India-U.S. approach
Section 232 / National Security Tariffs Core legal instrument; separate from IEEPA; survives SCOTUS ruling; affects Indian steel/aluminium
India's Energy Imports (Russia vs. diversification) Russian oil imports triggered a specific U.S. tariff penalty — links energy policy to trade diplomacy

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing IEEPA with Section 232: IEEPA tariffs were struck down by SCOTUS; Section 232 (national-security-based, steel/aluminium/copper) was not challenged and remains valid. Many aspirants conflate the two.
  2. Wrong tariff figures: The tariff on India went through multiple stages — 50% (mid-2025) → 25% (Feb 6, 2026, EO suspension) → 18% (interim agreement) → 10% (post-SCOTUS, Section 122 only). Confusing these stages is a common MCQ trap.
  3. Assuming the deal is signed: As of June 2026, the interim agreement is a framework/announcement only — signing is on hold pending U.S. global tariff framework post-SCOTUS. Do not treat it as a concluded agreement.
  4. Ministry confusion: Trade negotiations are led by Ministry of Commerce & Industry (not MEA or Finance Ministry, though they are stakeholders).
  5. GSP ≠ current deal: GSP termination (2019) was a separate, earlier event. The current negotiations are for a new bilateral Interim Trade Agreement, not GSP restoration.

11. Sources