The U.S. tariff shock, India’s pharma future

I now have sufficient facts from Tier 1 (pib.gov.in), Tier 2 (wto.org context), and Tier 4 (business-standard.com) plus the article excerpt. Here is the full study note:


The U.S. Tariff Shock & India's Pharma Future

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Fact
India pharma industry size ~$50 billion (2022-23) [S3]
Projected size by 2030 ~$130 billion [S3]
Export share of production ~50% [S3]
Total pharma exports FY2025 $30.38 billion [S1]
Exports to U.S. (FY2025) $10.52 billion (34.6% of total) [S1]
U.S. generic supply by India 47% of U.S. generic requirements [S1]
India's global rank (by volume) 3rd [S3]
USFDA-approved plants (India) Largest outside USA (~650+)
Pharma GDP contribution ~1.72% of India's GDP [S5]
Global pharma export market >$850 billion (2024) [S5]
PLI Pharma outlay ₹15,000 crore (high-value products) [S3]
PLI Bulk Drugs outlay ₹6,940 crore (KSMs/APIs/DIs) [S3]
PLI Bulk Drugs tenure FY2023–FY2029 [S3]
Trump tariff (patented drugs) 100% (announced Sep 2025, effective Oct 2025) [S5]
Generics tariff status Exempt (as of April 2026) [S5]
Key enabling law Patents Act, 1970 (amended 2005); Section 3(d)
Nodal Ministry Ministry of Chemicals & Fertilizers (Dept. of Pharmaceuticals)
Section 232 probe U.S. national-security route; potential pathway for tariff escalation [S4]

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Scientific / Technological

Administrative / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India is the 3rd largest pharmaceutical producer globally by volume (not value). [S3]
  2. India's pharma exports in FY2025 = $30.38 billion; U.S. share = $10.52 billion (34.6%). [S1]
  3. India supplies 47% of generic medicine requirements in the United States. [S1]
  4. Despite making up ~90% of U.S. drug volumes, generics account for only ~10% of U.S. drug market value. [S1]
  5. PLI Scheme for Bulk Drugs financial outlay = ₹6,940 crore; covers KSMs, Drug Intermediates (DIs), and APIs; production tenure FY2023–FY2029. [S3]
  6. PLI Scheme for Pharmaceuticals (high-value products) financial outlay = ₹15,000 crore; Cabinet approved July 2021. [S3]
  7. Under PLI Bulk Drugs: 48 projects selected, 34 commissioned for 25 bulk drugs. [S3]
  8. Section 3(d) of the Patents Act, 1970 (post-2005 amendment) prevents evergreening of pharmaceutical patents. [S5]
  9. Trump's 100% tariff on patented/branded pharmaceutical imports was announced in September 2025, effective October 1, 2025. [S5]
  10. Generics were exempted from Trump's reciprocal tariff (April 2025) but the exemption was flagged as conditional. [S2]
  11. Section 232 of the U.S. Trade Expansion Act allows tariffs on national security grounds, bypassing standard WTO dispute rules. [S4]
  12. Nodal ministry for India's pharmaceutical sector = Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers (Department of Pharmaceuticals), not Ministry of Health.
  13. India's pharma sector contributes approximately 1.72% to India's GDP. [S5]
  14. India has the largest number of USFDA-approved manufacturing plants outside the United States.
  15. Global pharmaceutical exports were valued at over $850 billion in 2024; top exporters = Germany, Switzerland, USA. [S5]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: - GS-II: India-U.S. bilateral relations; international trade; health policy; WTO - GS-III: Industrial policy (PLI); export competitiveness; technology and R&D; supply chain resilience

Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: "Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests" - GS-III: "Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment"; "Science and Technology — developments and their applications"

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The U.S. imposition of 100% tariffs on patented pharmaceutical imports in 2025 presents both a threat and an opportunity for India's pharmaceutical industry. Critically analyse." (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "India's dominance in generic pharmaceuticals is built on legal, economic, and technological pillars that are now under external stress. Examine the policy measures needed to sustain India's role as the 'pharmacy of the world'." (GS-II/GS-III, 15 marks) 3. "Discuss how WTO's TRIPS Agreement and its flexibilities, particularly Compulsory Licensing and Section 3(d) of India's Patents Act, shape India's pharmaceutical trade policy." (GS-II, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
PLI Scheme (Pharmaceuticals & Bulk Drugs) Core domestic policy response to API import-dependence and tariff risk
India-U.S. Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) 2025-26 Negotiating framework within which pharma exemptions are being sought
TRIPS Agreement & Doha Declaration Legal foundation of India's generic drug export model
WTO Dispute Settlement Mechanism Route for challenging U.S. tariffs if India-U.S. BTA talks fail
Compulsory Licensing (Section 84, Patents Act) India's domestic override tool; frequently examined alongside TRIPS
China + 1 Strategy (APIs & Supply Chains) India's opportunity to replace China as API supplier; directly linked to PLI Bulk Drugs
National List of Essential Medicines (NLEM) Domestic counterpart — price regulation vs. export competitiveness tension
Section 232 (U.S. Trade Expansion Act) Legal mechanism behind U.S. pharma tariff threat; GS-II international trade law

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong Ministry: Pharmaceuticals = Ministry of Chemicals & Fertilizers (Dept. of Pharmaceuticals). Aspirants often write Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, which handles the NLEM, drug pricing (DPCO), and CDSCO — not industrial/export policy.

  2. Generics ≠ Patented Drugs: The 100% tariff targets patented/branded drugs; generics remain exempt (as of 2026). Conflating the two gives a wrong picture of India's actual exposure. [S5]

  3. PLI Scheme Confusion: There are two separate PLI schemes — one for Bulk Drugs (₹6,940 crore, APIs/KSMs) and one for Pharmaceuticals (₹15,000 crore, high-value formulations). These are distinct in scope, outlay, and implementing emphasis.

  4. Section 3(d) vs. Compulsory Licensing: Section 3(d) prevents new patent grants (anti-evergreening); Compulsory Licensing (Section 84) overrides existing valid patents in public interest. These are often confused in answers.

  5. Volume vs. Value distortion: India supplies 47% of U.S. generic volumes but only ~10% of U.S. drug market value — a critical nuance. Overstating India's dollar-value dominance is a common error that weakens analysis. [S1]


11. Sources


Prepared for UPSC CSE 2026. Verified against PIB (Tier 1) and Business Standard (Tier 4) sources as of June 2026.

Sources: - Indian pharma firms likely to dodge immediate impact of Trump's tariff - India-US trade deal: Pharma sees no major change during Section 232 probe - Trump imposes 100% tariff on patented drug imports; generics spared - PLI Scheme for Pharmaceuticals — PIB - Cabinet approves PLI Scheme for Pharmaceuticals — PIB