Exporters relieved, farmers upset over trade agreement

The web searches failed due to domain restrictions. I will ground the note fully in the article excerpt (Tier 4) plus established UPSC-relevant background knowledge, citing the article as the primary source throughout.


UPSC Study Note: India–US Trade Agreement — Exporters Relieved, Farmers Upset


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


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

Social / Agrarian

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India's Seafood Exporters Association of India (SEAI) welcomed the India–US trade deal that reduced US tariffs on Indian seafood to 18%. [S1]
  2. The Samyukt Kisan Morcha (SKM) is an umbrella organisation of farm outfits — not a single union — that opposed the India–US trade deal. [S1]
  3. As per the US agricultural survey of 2024, the US has 18.8 lakh (approximately 1.88 million) farmers. [S1]
  4. India has 14.65 crore operational holdings as per the Agriculture Census of 2015 (not 2011 or 2020). [S1]
  5. Crops cited by SKM as threatened by zero-tariff US imports: soya bean, cotton, maize, and wheat (not rice or pulses). [S1]
  6. The Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU) — not the BMS (Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh) — opposed the deal from the labour side. [S1]
  7. Foreign Trade (Development & Regulation) Act, 1992 is the enabling legislation for India's import-export policy; administered by DGFT.
  8. GATT Article XXIV governs WTO-compatible free trade areas and customs unions — relevant to evaluating bilateral tariff deals.
  9. India's GSP status was revoked by the US in June 2019, marking a key rupture in prior preferential trade access.
  10. 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.
  11. MPEDA (Marine Products Export Development Authority) — under Ministry of Commerce — is the nodal body for seafood export promotion; not the Ministry of Fisheries alone.
  12. 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.
  13. 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

  1. 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.
  2. 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]
  3. 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).
  4. 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]
  5. 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


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.