Can India overtake Bangladesh in EU textile exports?


Can India Overtake Bangladesh in EU Textile Exports?

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
EU textile import market size ~$263.5 billion (total imports) [S1]
Bangladesh RMG exports to EU (FY25) ~$19.71 billion; >50% of Bangladesh's total RMG exports [S2]
Bangladesh EU apparel exports (2024 calendar) ~$18.27 billion [S4]
India EU apparel exports (2024 calendar) ~$4.18 billion [S4]
Bangladesh share in EU knitted garments (2023) ~26% [S5]
India share in EU knitted garments (2023) ~4.4% [S5]
India woven garments to EU (peak) ~$3.5 billion (declined to ~$2.9 billion) [S5]
LDC duty preference (EBA) Duty-free, quota-free; covers all tariff lines
Bangladesh LDC graduation date November 2026
Post-graduation transition period 3 years (preferences intact until ~2029) [S2]
Tariff disadvantage India faced Up to 12% on garments vs. Bangladesh's 0%
India-EU FTA tariff benefit Zero duty on all textile/clothing tariff lines [S1]
Implementing ministry (India trade) Ministry of Commerce and Industry
Bangladesh's LDC preference scheme EBA under EU GSP Regulation
GSP+ alternative for Bangladesh Requires compliance with 27 international conventions

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Social

Administrative / Structural

Environmental


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Bangladesh's share of EU knitted/crocheted garment imports in 2023: ~26%; India's: ~4.4%. [S5]
  2. Bangladesh is scheduled to graduate from LDC status in November 2026. [S2]
  3. After LDC graduation, Bangladesh retains EU duty-free access for a transition period of 3 years (~until 2029). [S2]
  4. The India-EU FTA eliminates tariffs of up to 12% on Indian garments entering the EU. [S1]
  5. EU's garment imports from Bangladesh valued at ~$18.27 billion in 2024; from India at ~$4.18 billion. [S4]
  6. Bangladesh's RMG exports to the EU account for over 50% of its total garment exports (~$19.71 billion in FY25). [S2]
  7. GSP+ status (the alternative for Bangladesh post-LDC) requires compliance with 27 international conventions on labour, environment, and governance.
  8. EBA (Everything But Arms) is the scheme under which LDCs receive duty-free, quota-free EU access — Bangladesh currently benefits from this. [S3]
  9. India's woven garment exports to the EU declined from a peak of ~$3.5 billion to ~$2.9 billion in nominal value. [S5]
  10. India's textile exports to EU are concentrated in intermediates (yarns, fabrics), not finished garments — a key structural gap. [S5]
  11. The India-EU FTA negotiations were relaunched in 2022 after nearly a decade-long pause.
  12. Ministry of Commerce and Industry is the nodal ministry for India's FTA negotiations.
  13. Bangladesh's EU apparel exports grew ~24% YoY in early 2025, even as post-LDC pressures mount. [S4]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper mapping: - GS-II: India's bilateral/multilateral trade agreements; India-EU relations; WTO and preferential trade architecture. - GS-III: Indian economy — export sector, trade competitiveness, industrial policy; textile sector; MSMEs.

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; Effects of liberalization on the economy, industrial policy

Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "The India-EU Free Trade Agreement presents both an opportunity and a structural challenge for India's textile sector. Critically examine." (GS-III) 2. "Assess the implications of Bangladesh's graduation from LDC status for South Asian trade dynamics and India's export competitiveness in the EU market." (GS-II/GS-III) 3. "What structural reforms does India's readymade garment sector need to move from intermediate-product exports to finished garments in global value chains? Discuss with reference to the EU market." (GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
GSP / EBA / GSP+ architecture of EU trade Underpins the entire Bangladesh LDC advantage and post-graduation options
India's FTA strategy (CECA/CEPA/FTA portfolio) India-EU FTA is part of a broader renegotiation of trade agreements post-2022
Bangladesh political transition (2024) Sheikh Hasina ouster, Yunus-led interim government — supply chain risk for EU buyers
WTO Agreement on Textiles and Clothing (ATC) Historical context; quota elimination that reshaped global garment trade
Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme for Textiles India's domestic supply-side response to boost man-made fibre and technical textiles
EU Green Deal / Textile Strategy 2030 New non-tariff sustainability barriers affecting both India and Bangladesh
China+1 / Supply Chain Diversification Macro context in which India's garment competitiveness is being evaluated
MSME and labour law reforms in India Critical enablers for India to scale RMG production competitively

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing EBA with GSP+: EBA (Everything But Arms) is automatic for LDCs — no conditionality. GSP+ requires active compliance with 27 conventions and an application. Bangladesh currently has EBA; GSP+ would be a step down in preference depth.
  2. Assuming FTA alone solves India's garment gap: Tariff equalisation addresses only one dimension. India's structural challenge is insufficient garmenting/CMT (Cut-Make-Trim) capacity — a domestic industrial problem, not a trade policy problem.
  3. Misidentifying graduation timeline: Bangladesh graduates in November 2026, but loses EU preferences only after the 3-year transition (~2029) — the competitive impact is not immediate.
  4. Conflating "textile" and "garment": India leads in upstream textiles (yarn, fabric); Bangladesh leads in downstream RMG (finished garments). UPSC questions often test this value-chain distinction.
  5. Assuming Bangladesh's loss = India's gain: EU buyers can (and do) shift to Vietnam, Cambodia, China, Pakistan — India competes in a multi-horse race, not a bilateral contest.

11. Sources