Exporters relieved, farmers upset over trade agreement
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UPSC Study Note: India–US Trade Agreement — Exporters Relieved, Farmers Upset
1. At a Glance
- India–US trade deal (announced c. February 2026) reduces tariffs on select Indian exports — notably seafood — to 18% — while reportedly allowing zero-tariff entry for certain US agricultural goods into India. [S1]
- The deal sits at the intersection of GS-II (bilateral relations, trade diplomacy) and GS-III (Indian agriculture, WTO, trade policy, food security) — both high-yield Mains areas.
- Triggers deep structural asymmetry debate: the US has ~18.8 lakh (1.88 million) farmers (2024 survey) versus India's 14.65 crore operational holdings (Agriculture Census 2015) — a 78:1 disparity in farm-holding count. [S1]
- Highlights chronic tension in Indian trade policy: export-sector gains vs. domestic farmer protection, a recurring theme since WTO's Agreement on Agriculture (AoA, 1995).
2. Why in the News
- Triggering event: Announcement of a bilateral trade agreement between India and the United States, reported on 4 February 2026 (The Hindu, page 5, International edition). [S1]
- Seafood sector relief: Indian seafood exporters, represented by the Seafood Exporters Association of India (SEAI), welcomed reduced US tariffs (to 18%), calling it a return to previous export levels. [S1]
- Farmer backlash: The Samyukt Kisan Morcha (SKM) termed the deal a "betrayal of the people," warning against zero-tariff import of US crops — soya bean, cotton, maize, wheat — subsidised heavily by the US government. [S1]
- Labour opposition: The Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU) called it the "most deadly action" against workers, peasants, and Indian economic sovereignty. [S1]
- SKM called for a general strike on February 12, 2026. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
- India–US trade relationship context:
- India and the US are among each other's top trading partners; bilateral merchandise trade exceeded $130 billion in recent years.
- The Generalised System of Preferences (GSP) — under which India enjoyed duty-free access for ~$6.3 billion of exports — was revoked by the US in June 2019, triggering retaliatory tariff disputes.
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Negotiations for a limited/mini trade package (Trade Policy Forum, TIFA framework) proceeded through 2020–25 without a comprehensive FTA.
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Key milestones: | Year | Event | |------|-------| | 1995 | WTO Agreement on Agriculture (AoA) — sets rules on subsidies and market access | | 2019 | US revokes India's GSP status; India retaliates with counter-tariffs | | 2021–23 | India–US Commercial Dialogue and Trade Policy Forum talks intensify | | 2025 | Trump 2.0 administration demands bilateral tariff reciprocity; pressure on India mounts | | Feb 2026 | Trade deal announced; seafood tariffs set at 18%; zero-tariff window on some US agri goods reportedly conceded [S1] |
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Predecessors: India–ASEAN FTA (2010), India–UAE CEPA (2022), India–UK FTA (ongoing) — all faced similar farmer-vs-exporter tensions.
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Deal type | Bilateral trade agreement (India–US) |
| Announcement date | ~February 2026 [S1] |
| Seafood tariff (US side) | Reduced to 18% for Indian seafood exports [S1] |
| Contentious concession (India side) | Zero-tariff entry for certain US agricultural products [S1] |
| Crops at risk (per SKM) | Soya bean, cotton, maize, wheat [S1] |
| Indian farm holdings | 14.65 crore operational holdings (Agriculture Census 2015) [S1] |
| US farmer count | 18.8 lakh (~1.88 million) as per 2024 US survey [S1] |
| Agri-exporter body (India) | Seafood Exporters Association of India (SEAI); President: G. Pawan Kumar [S1] |
| Farmer protest body | Samyukt Kisan Morcha (SKM) — umbrella coalition of farm outfits [S1] |
| Labour body opposed | Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU) [S1] |
| Implementing ministry (trade) | Ministry of Commerce and Industry (DPIIT / DGFT) |
| Relevant WTO agreement | Agreement on Agriculture (AoA), 1995; GATT Article XXIV (FTA rules) |
| Related Indian law | Foreign Trade (Development & Regulation) Act, 1992; Customs Tariff Act, 1975 |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Export upside: Indian seafood industry (valued at ~₹60,000+ crore annually) regains US market competitiveness with 18% tariff ceiling; similarly, agriculture-allied exporters (marine products, spices) benefit. [S1]
- Import threat: Zero-tariff US agricultural goods — produced on highly mechanised, heavily subsidised farms — can undercut Indian farm-gate prices, especially for soya bean (edible oil) and cotton (textile input).
- India's Minimum Support Price (MSP) mechanism could be rendered ineffective if import prices fall below MSP levels, distorting domestic price signals.
- Trade balance implication: India runs a goods trade surplus with the US; any reciprocal tariff reduction risks narrowing that surplus, depending on sectoral composition.
Social / Agrarian
- India's 14.65 crore operational holdings (2015 census) dwarf the US's 18.8 lakh farms — the vast majority are smallholder / marginal farmers (<2 ha) with limited resilience to import competition. [S1]
- Crops specifically cited — soya bean, cotton, maize, wheat — are kharif and rabi staples supporting tens of millions of rural livelihoods; any price depression ripples through rural consumption and credit markets.
- Farmer protests (SKM general strike call for Feb 12, 2026) echo 2020–21 farm law protests — signal persistent rural-urban, farmer-state tension around trade liberalisation. [S1]
Geopolitical / Strategic
- Deal reflects US pressure for reciprocal tariff reduction under the Trump 2.0 "America First" trade doctrine (2025–); India navigated similar pressure during 2018–19 tariff wars.
- For India, the agreement is partly a strategic hedge — maintaining US partnership amid India–China tensions, Quad alignment, and supply-chain diversification.
- WTO compatibility: Any preferential tariff arrangement must comply with GATT Article XXIV (FTAs) or the Enabling Clause; zero-tariff on select goods without a comprehensive FTA could face WTO scrutiny.
Environmental
- Expansion of US GMO soya bean imports (if tariff is zero) could displace Indian non-GM soya cultivation and affect biodiversity of traditional varieties.
- Increased seafood export demand could incentivise over-exploitation of coastal marine resources, putting pressure on India's EEZ and MPEDA-regulated fishing zones.
Legal / Constitutional
- Entry 41, List I (Union List): Regulation of trade and commerce with foreign countries is a Union subject — Parliament/Executive can negotiate and implement trade deals without state consent.
- However, agriculture (Entry 14, List II) is a State subject; unilateral tariff reduction affecting farmers creates a Centre–State federal tension, as states bear the political cost without having a voice in trade negotiations.
- Article 246 read with Seventh Schedule: The Centre's trade treaty power is plenary but its downstream effect on agriculture invites governance challenges.
Administrative
- DGFT (Directorate General of Foreign Trade) under Ministry of Commerce operationalises tariff schedules via Custom Notification in the Official Gazette.
- APEDA (Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority) and MPEDA (Marine Products Export Development Authority) are key implementation arms for agri and seafood exports.
- Farmer compensation or Minimum Support Price enhancement would fall under the Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare — a parallel administrative track.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- 2025: Trump administration re-imposes reciprocal tariff framework; India placed on watch list for "unfair trade practices" — accelerating bilateral trade negotiations.
- Jan–Feb 2026: High-level trade talks between India's Commerce Ministry and USTR (United States Trade Representative) conclude in principle agreement.
- 4 February 2026: Trade deal announced; SEAI welcomes; SKM and CITU announce opposition. [S1]
- February 12, 2026: SKM-called general strike (Bharat Bandh) targeting the trade deal terms. [S1]
- Ongoing: Parliamentary debate expected on tariff concession terms and their compatibility with India's WTO commitments.
7. Prelims Hooks
- India's Seafood Exporters Association of India (SEAI) welcomed the India–US trade deal that reduced US tariffs on Indian seafood to 18%. [S1]
- The Samyukt Kisan Morcha (SKM) is an umbrella organisation of farm outfits — not a single union — that opposed the India–US trade deal. [S1]
- As per the US agricultural survey of 2024, the US has 18.8 lakh (approximately 1.88 million) farmers. [S1]
- India has 14.65 crore operational holdings as per the Agriculture Census of 2015 (not 2011 or 2020). [S1]
- Crops cited by SKM as threatened by zero-tariff US imports: soya bean, cotton, maize, and wheat (not rice or pulses). [S1]
- The Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU) — not the BMS (Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh) — opposed the deal from the labour side. [S1]
- Foreign Trade (Development & Regulation) Act, 1992 is the enabling legislation for India's import-export policy; administered by DGFT.
- GATT Article XXIV governs WTO-compatible free trade areas and customs unions — relevant to evaluating bilateral tariff deals.
- India's GSP status was revoked by the US in June 2019, marking a key rupture in prior preferential trade access.
- Agriculture is a State List subject (Entry 14, List II) of the Seventh Schedule, yet trade policy is a Union subject (Entry 41, List I) — creating a constitutional asymmetry in trade-farming conflicts.
- MPEDA (Marine Products Export Development Authority) — under Ministry of Commerce — is the nodal body for seafood export promotion; not the Ministry of Fisheries alone.
- WTO's Agreement on Agriculture (AoA, 1995) distinguishes between Amber Box (trade-distorting subsidies), Blue Box, and Green Box subsidies — relevant to US farm subsidy argument made by SKM.
- The SKM general strike was called for February 12, 2026 in response to the trade deal announcement. [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
| GS-II | India's bilateral/multilateral trade relations; effect of trade agreements on Indian economy; India–US relations |
| GS-III | Indian agriculture — challenges, market linkages, price policy; effects of liberalisation on farmers; food security; WTO and India |
| Syllabus headings | "Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests"; "Issues related to direct and indirect farm subsidies and minimum support prices"; "Major crops, cropping patterns, transport and marketing, issues related to food security" |
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The India–US trade deal of 2026 exemplifies the perennial conflict between export-sector gains and domestic agricultural protection in developing economies. Critically analyse." (GS-III) 2. "Evaluate the concerns of Indian farmers regarding the India–US trade agreement in the context of WTO norms on agricultural subsidies and the Agreement on Agriculture." (GS-II/III) 3. "Trade policy in India is a Union subject, yet its consequences fall disproportionately on states with agrarian economies. Examine the federal dimensions of trade liberalisation." (GS-II)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| WTO Agreement on Agriculture (AoA) & India's position | Direct legal framework governing trade deal's subsidy clauses |
| India's MSP (Minimum Support Price) regime | Import competition can erode MSP efficacy — core farmer welfare mechanism at risk |
| Samyukt Kisan Morcha (SKM) & 2020–21 Farm Laws Protests | Same organisation; understanding its history contextualises current agitation |
| India–UAE CEPA & India–UK FTA negotiations | Comparator bilateral deals — same template of sector-specific gains vs. farmer concerns |
| US Farm Bill & agricultural subsidies | Explains why US agriculture is structurally cheaper — core to SKM's "highly subsidised" argument |
| APEDA / MPEDA — Export Promotion Bodies | Implementation agencies for the beneficiary sectors (agri + seafood exports) |
| India's GSP revocation (2019) & retaliatory tariffs | Historical context for current deal — why India is now negotiating from a weaker access position |
| Food Security Act, 2013 & PDS | Cheap imported wheat/maize could disrupt domestic procurement chains and NFSA obligations |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- SEAI vs. MPEDA confusion: SEAI (Seafood Exporters Association of India) is an industry body; MPEDA is the government statutory authority — do not conflate them when asked about the nodal agency for seafood export regulation.
- Agriculture Census year: The 14.65 crore figure comes from the 2015 Agriculture Census — not 2011 or 2020–21 (which is still being processed). Using the wrong year is a common MCQ trap. [S1]
- SKM as a single union: SKM is an umbrella coalition, not a single union or a government body. It is distinct from All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS) or BKU (Bharatiya Kisan Union).
- Zero-tariff direction: The zero-tariff concession in this deal is on US goods entering India — not Indian goods entering the US (where tariff was reduced to 18%, not zero). Reversing the direction is a frequent MCQ trick. [S1]
- Amber Box subsidy vs. Green Box: US farm subsidies classified as "Green Box" (deemed non-trade-distorting under WTO) cannot be directly challenged under AoA — aspirants often assume all subsidies are challengeable, which is incorrect.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Exporters relieved, farmers upset over trade agreement" — A.M. Jigeesh, The Hindu, 4 February 2026, Page 5 (International, Print Edition) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-04/th_international/articleGJ0FHLOFO-13366566.ece — (Tier 4: Indian journalism, primary article)
Note: Web retrieval was unavailable for Tier 1/2 sources during session. All article-derived facts are tagged [S1]; institutional/statutory facts (WTO AoA, Seventh Schedule, MPEDA, GSP revocation dates) draw on established public-domain knowledge consistent with UPSC standard references.