India’s trade strategy in a multipolar world


India's Trade Strategy in a Multipolar World

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Period Milestone
1991 Liberalisation — shift from import-substitution; GATT participation deepens
1995 India joins WTO at inception; binds tariffs on many items
2004–2011 First-generation FTAs: SAFTA (2006), ASEAN goods FTA (2010), South Korea CEPA (2010)
2011–2018 Cautious phase — RCEP negotiations joined but hesitations emerge
2019 India exits RCEP citing asymmetric trade deficits (esp. China risk); FTA coverage ~22% of export basket
April 2022 India–UAE CEPA — India's first CEPA with a Gulf nation; concluded in 88 days
April 2022 India–Australia ECTA (Early Harvest) signed
April 2023 FTP 2023 launched — replaces FTP 2015–20 extended; four pillars framework [S5]
2024–25 India–UK CETA concluded; India–Oman CEPA signed; GCC FTA negotiations ongoing [S4]
Nov 2025 Export Promotion Mission approved with ₹25,060 cr outlay [S4]

Predecessors: FTP 2015–20 (extended twice); MEIS/SEIS (replaced by RoDTEP/RoSCTL as WTO-compatible alternatives) [S6]


4. Core Static Facts

Foreign Trade Policy 2023 - Launched: 31 March 2023, New Delhi [S5] - Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Commerce and Industry (Department of Commerce) - Four pillars: (i) Incentive to Remission, (ii) Export promotion through collaboration (Exporters, States, Districts, Missions), (iii) Ease of doing business / e-initiatives, (iv) Emerging areas — E-Commerce, Districts as Export Hubs, SCOMET policy [S5] - Export target: $2 trillion by 2030 (merchandise + services combined) [S2][S5] - 2025 total exports: $825.25 billion (+6.05% YoY) [S1][S3]

FTA Landscape - FTA coverage of export basket: ~22% (2019) → ~71% (projected, 2026) [S1] - Active CEPAs/FTAs: UAE, Australia, Mauritius, South Korea, Japan, ASEAN, SAARC/SAFTA, Sri Lanka, Singapore, Malaysia - Recent additions (2024-25): India–UK CETA (99% duty-free access), India–Oman CEPA (18 Dec 2025), Israel FTA Terms of Reference (Nov 2025) [S4] - Under negotiation: EU FTA (relaunched 2022), GCC FTA, India–Canada CEPA (stalled)

Export Promotion Mission - Approved: 12 November 2025 [S4] - Outlay: ₹25,060 crore, FY 2025–26 to 2030–31 - Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Commerce and Industry

WTO Compliance - RoDTEP (Remission of Duties and Taxes on Exported Products) — WTO-compatible replacement for MEIS [S6] - India's trade is reviewed under the WTO Trade Policy Review mechanism [S7]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Economic (Domestic Competitiveness)

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India's total exports (merchandise + services) in 2025: $825.25 billion, a 6.05% annual increase. [S1][S3]
  2. FTP 2023 was launched on 31 March 2023 by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry. [S5]
  3. Target: India aims to reach $2 trillion in total exports by 2030 under FTP 2023. [S2][S5]
  4. India's FTA export basket coverage: ~22% in 2019 → projected ~71% by 2026. [S1]
  5. India exited RCEP in November 2019 (at Bangkok Summit) citing asymmetric trade deficits; the only major Asian economy outside it.
  6. India–UK CETA (2025): Provides duty-free access on 99% of India's exports to the UK. [S4]
  7. India–Oman CEPA was signed on 18 December 2025. [S4]
  8. Export Promotion Mission approved 12 November 2025; outlay ₹25,060 crore (FY26–FY31). [S4]
  9. RoDTEP (Remission of Duties and Taxes on Exported Products) is a WTO-compatible export incentive scheme, replacing the earlier MEIS. [S6]
  10. FTP 2023 pillars (4): (i) Incentive to Remission, (ii) Collaboration (exporters/states/districts/missions), (iii) Ease of doing business, (iv) Emerging areas (e-commerce, export hubs, SCOMET). [S5]
  11. Statutory basis for India's Foreign Trade Policy: Foreign Trade (Development and Regulation) Act, 1992.
  12. Implementing body for FTP: Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT), under Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
  13. India–Israel FTA Terms of Reference signed November 2025; priority sectors include AI, quantum computing, pharma, and space. [S4]
  14. India's first CEPA with a Gulf nation was with the UAE (April 2022), concluded in just 88 days.
  15. Districts as Export Hubs is a key initiative under FTP 2023 to decentralise export production. [S5]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: - GS-II: India's foreign policy; bilateral/multilateral groupings; effect of policies of developed/developing countries on India's interests - GS-III: Indian economy; effects of liberalisation on the economy; infrastructure; investment models; trade and balance of payments

Specific syllabus headings: - GS-II: "Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India's interests" - GS-III: "Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilization of resources, growth, development and employment"

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "India's exit from RCEP in 2019 was a strategic retreat, but its FTA expansion since 2022 suggests a more confident re-engagement with global trade. Critically examine India's evolving trade strategy in a multipolar world." (GS-II/III) 2. "Evaluate the significance of India's Foreign Trade Policy 2023 in achieving the $2 trillion export target by 2030. What structural reforms are still needed?" (GS-III) 3. "How does the principle of Strategic Autonomy shape India's approach to bilateral and multilateral trade agreements? Illustrate with recent examples." (GS-II)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why Connected
RCEP and India's exit Direct predecessor to understanding India's current FTA recalibration
WTO reforms and India's position India is an active litigant/negotiator; WTO's dispute settlement crisis affects India's trade interests
India–EU FTA (relaunched 2022) Potentially India's largest FTA; negotiations cover digital trade, carbon border adjustments, labour standards
Make in India / PLI Schemes Supply-side complement to demand-side FTA market access — without domestic production scaling, FTAs remain underutilised
India's Balance of Payments & Current Account Deficit Trade strategy must be read alongside BoP vulnerability; services surplus offsets goods deficit
IMEC (India–Middle East–Europe Economic Corridor) Geo-economic counterpart to trade policy — connectivity infrastructure underpins FTA benefits
China+1 Strategy and Global Supply Chains India's central pitch to MNCs; FTAs are the trade policy instrument enabling this pitch
E-Commerce and Digital Trade Rules (WTO moratorium) FTP 2023 explicitly targets e-commerce exports; WTO digital trade negotiations directly affect India

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. MEIS vs RoDTEP confusion: MEIS was scrapped as WTO-incompatible (ruled against in 2019 dispute). Its replacement is RoDTEP (WTO-compatible). Don't credit MEIS as current policy.
  2. FTP 2023 launch date: Aspirants often say "2022" — the correct date is 31 March 2023. FTP 2015–20 was extended multiple times (including one 6-month extension) before being replaced.
  3. RCEP exit year: India exited at the November 2019 Bangkok ASEAN Summit, not in 2020. The agreement was signed by 15 nations in November 2020 without India.
  4. India–UAE CEPA vs India–UK CETA: These are different agreements with different scopes. UAE CEPA (2022) is goods-heavy; UK CETA (2025) covers 99% of goods + services + investment. Don't conflate them.
  5. "FTA coverage" metric: The ~71% figure refers to share of India's export basket covered under FTA networks — it does not mean 71% of trade is actually preferential. Utilisation rates of FTAs often remain low (a separate issue).
  6. Ministry confusion: FTP is under Ministry of Commerce and Industry (Department of Commerce). Do not confuse with Ministry of Finance or MEA, even though they are stakeholders in FTA negotiations.

11. Sources