Trade deal: unanswered questions remain


India–US Trade Deal: Unanswered Questions Remain

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
April 2025 Trump imposes "Liberation Day" reciprocal tariffs globally; India faces 25% reciprocal + 25% Russian-oil penalty = up to 50% total tariffs
Feb 13, 2025 Modi–Trump Washington summit; BTA negotiations formally launched; first-tranche target set for fall 2025 [S2]
Mid-2025 US–India trade teams begin sector-wise BTA negotiations; India Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal targets first tranche by end-2025 [S5]
Feb 3, 2026 Trump publicly announces "trade deal" with India during Jaishankar's Washington visit [S4]
Feb 6, 2026 US–India Joint Statement released; framework for interim trade agreement formalised; US tariff on Indian goods set at 18% (IEEPA rate) [S1][S2]
May 2026 Broader BTA negotiation text still unreleased; India–EU FTA negotiations also progressed [S6]

Predecessors: The 2019–20 U.S.–India Trade Policy Forum (TPF) talks and GSP withdrawal (2019) by the US form the earlier backdrop of bilateral trade friction.


4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The US–India Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) was formally launched on February 13, 2025 during PM Modi's visit to Washington. [S2]
  2. Under the February 2026 interim framework, US reciprocal tariffs on Indian goods were reduced from 25% to 18%. [S1]
  3. The additional 25% punitive US tariff on Indian goods was linked to India's purchase of Russian Federation oil. [S3]
  4. EAM Jaishankar's February 2026 Washington visit (for a Critical Minerals Ministerial) was his 7th visit to the US since Trump's election. [S4]
  5. New US Ambassador to India: Sergio Gor (took charge early 2026). [S4]
  6. Under the deal, India agreed to reduce/eliminate tariffs on US agri items including dried distillers' grains, red sorghum, tree nuts, soybean oil, wine & spirits. [S1]
  7. Trump's legal instrument for imposing/modifying these tariffs: IEEPA (International Emergency Economic Powers Act) — an executive power, not requiring Congress approval. [S1]
  8. The US agreed to remove tariffs on certain aircraft and aircraft parts from India as part of the interim deal. [S1]
  9. No negotiated text of either the interim framework or the broader FTA has been publicly released by either government (as of Feb 2026). [S4]
  10. The BTA negotiation scope includes: tariffs, NTBs, services & investment, IPR, labour, environment, government procurement, and SOE trade practices. [S1]
  11. Trump's public claim that India would reduce tariffs and NTBs to ZERO was not confirmed by New Delhi. [S4]
  12. India's commerce ministry implementing agency for trade negotiations: Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) under Ministry of Commerce & Industry.
  13. The US–India bilateral trade deficit (India's surplus): approximately $45–50 billion — the original American grievance driving tariff pressure.

8. Mains Relevance

Parameter Detail
GS Paper GS-II (India's foreign policy; India–US relations; international trade institutions)
GS-III (Indian economy; trade; external sector; WTO and India)
Syllabus heading GS-II: Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and affecting India's interests
GS-III: Effects of liberalization on the economy; changes in industrial policy; export/import trends

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "The India–US interim trade framework of February 2026 raises as many questions as it resolves. Critically examine the strategic gains and economic concessions involved." (GS-II / GS-III, 15 marks)

  2. "India's agreement to cease Russian oil purchases as part of a trade deal with the US reflects a fundamental shift in its strategic autonomy calculus. Discuss." (GS-II, 15 marks)

  3. "The absence of a publicly negotiated text in India's bilateral trade agreements raises concerns about parliamentary oversight and democratic accountability. Analyse." (GS-II, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why It Connects
India–US relations post-2017 (Trump era I & II) Essential backdrop to tariff tensions and diplomatic reset
India's WTO commitments & tariff bindings Reducing tariffs to zero may conflict with WTO Most-Favoured-Nation (MFN) obligations
India–Russia energy ties & oil import policy Central to why the 25% punitive tariff existed and what India conceded
India–EU FTA (BTIA) negotiations Running parallel; similar issues of NTBs, IPR, and services access
India–UK FTA Signed 2025; comparison case for India's FTA negotiating posture and concessions
Critical Minerals supply chains The ministerial that provided diplomatic context for the announcement
IEEPA & US trade law Legal mechanism behind Trump's tariff architecture — MCQ-ready
India's current account & trade deficit dynamics Structural context for why the US presses India on tariff asymmetry

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. "First tranche = Full FTA" — WRONG. The February 2026 document is an interim framework, not a comprehensive Free Trade Agreement. A full BTA text has not been released.

  2. Tariff number confusion: The combined US tariff was up to 50% (25% reciprocal + 25% Russian-oil). After the deal, only the reciprocal component was reduced to 18%; the Russian-oil tariff was dropped entirely on India's commitment to stop such purchases. Don't cite "25% reduced to 18%" without this nuance.

  3. Attributing "zero tariff" commitment to India — Trump claimed this publicly; New Delhi explicitly did not confirm it. Treat it as a disputed claim, not a settled fact.

  4. Confusing BTA with GSP — The earlier US–India trade friction involved withdrawal of India from GSP (Generalised System of Preferences) in 2019; the 2025–26 BTA is a separate bilateral negotiating track.

  5. Ministry mix-up: Trade deal negotiations involve Ministry of Commerce & Industry (lead) + MEA (diplomatic track) + DPIIT (regulatory). Not MEA alone, and not NITI Aayog.


11. Sources