U.S. tariff on India cut to 18%, say Modi, Trump
U.S. Tariff on India Cut to 18%: Modi–Trump Trade Deal (Feb 2026)
1. At a Glance
- On 2 February 2026, U.S. President Trump and PM Modi announced a bilateral trade framework reducing the U.S. tariff on Indian goods from 50% → 18%, effective immediately. [S1][S2]
- The deal is a partial BTA (Bilateral Trade Agreement) framework, not a full FTA — details ("devil in the details") remain to be negotiated. [S3]
- India committed to reduce tariffs and non-tariff barriers (NTBs) against the U.S. to zero and cease purchases of Russian oil. [S1][S2]
- Critical for UPSC: tests GS-II (India-U.S. relations), GS-III (trade policy, external sector), and the IEEPA/WTO legal dimension.
2. Why in the News
- 2 February 2026: Trump posted on Truth Social announcing the deal; Modi confirmed on X — "Made in India products will now attract a reduced tariff of 18%." [S1][S4]
- The deal resolved a bilateral trade and diplomatic crisis that had escalated through 2025: U.S. had imposed a 25% reciprocal tariff (April 2025), then an additional 25% penalty linked to India's Russian oil purchases (August 2025), bringing total additional duties to 50% effective 27 August 2025. [S5][S6]
- 20 February 2026: U.S. Supreme Court ruled Trump lacked authority under IEEPA to impose sweeping economy-wide tariffs, adding a legal dimension — Trump subsequently stated the India deal remains unchanged. [S7]
3. Background & Evolution
| Date | Milestone |
|---|---|
| April 2025 | Trump imposes 25% reciprocal tariff on Indian goods under IEEPA authority |
| August 1, 2025 | Additional 25% penalty tariff imposed, citing India–Russia oil ties |
| 27 August 2025 | Combined 50% additional duty comes into effect on Indian exports |
| 2 February 2026 | Modi–Trump phone call; deal announced — tariff slashed to 18% |
| 6–7 February 2026 | White House publishes joint statement; Executive Order removing Russian-oil-linked 25% issued, effective 7 February 2026 [S2] |
| 20 February 2026 | U.S. Supreme Court strikes down IEEPA-based economy-wide tariffs (does not immediately alter India deal per Trump) [S7] |
Predecessors/Context: - India was not part of the USMCA (U.S.–Mexico–Canada Agreement). - India and U.S. had a GSP (Generalized System of Preferences) arrangement; U.S. revoked India's GSP status in June 2019, citing "equitable and reasonable access" concerns — an early precursor to tariff friction. - U.S.–India 2025 diplomatic and trade crisis (Wikipedia) emerged from multiple flash-points: tariffs, immigration, H-1B policy, and Adani indictment backdrop. [S8]
4. Core Static Facts
Tariff Structure (as of 7 Feb 2026): - Pre-deal (Aug 2025–Feb 2026): 25% reciprocal + 25% penalty = 50% total additional tariff on Indian goods [S5] - Post-deal: 18% reciprocal tariff (baseline reduced); 25% Russian-oil penalty removed via Executive Order [S2] - Net effective tariff on most Indian goods: ~18% (plus pre-existing MFN duties which are separate)
India's Commitments: - Reduce tariffs and NTBs against U.S. to zero [S1] - Stop purchasing Russian Federation oil [S1][S2] - Purchase >$500 billion worth of U.S. goods (energy, technology, agriculture) [S1]
Key Actors: - Indian side: PM Modi; Commerce Minister (welcomed developments) - U.S. side: President Trump; White House (issued Fact Sheet + Executive Order) [S2] - External Affairs Ministry (MEA): yet to fully respond to all details at time of announcement [S4]
Legal Instrument (U.S. side): - Tariffs imposed under IEEPA (International Emergency Economic Powers Act) - Reduction effected via Presidential Executive Order [S2][S7]
Trade Volume Context: - U.S. is India's largest trading partner; bilateral goods trade ~$120–130 billion/year (pre-crisis) - India committed to increase purchases to $500 billion — a very significant scaling up [S1]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Reduction from 50% to 18% significantly restores competitiveness of Indian goods in U.S. market: sectors like textiles, gems & jewellery, pharmaceuticals, IT hardware, engineering goods had been hardest hit. [S5][S6]
- India's commitment to buy $500 bn of U.S. goods implies major increases in U.S. energy (LNG/oil), defence, agricultural imports — substituting Russian energy supply chains. [S1]
- Current Account implications: larger U.S. import bill may widen India's CAD (Current Account Deficit) unless offset by higher export revenues from tariff relief.
- GSP non-restoration: the deal does not restore preferential zero-duty access (GSP); 18% is a negotiated rate, not a preferential development-country concession.
Geopolitical / Strategic
- India's agreement to cease Russian oil purchases marks a significant foreign policy pivot — India had been the world's second-largest buyer of discounted Russian crude after Western sanctions (post-Feb 2022 Ukraine war). [S1][S2]
- The deal signals alignment with the U.S.-led economic order and distances India from the Russia–Iran–China axis in energy trade.
- Quad signalling: reinforces India–U.S. strategic convergence amid China rivalry.
- Risks: complicates India's strategic autonomy doctrine; energy price implications if Russian discounts lost.
Legal / Constitutional
- U.S. tariffs were imposed under IEEPA — a statute allowing the President to regulate trade in a "national emergency." [S7]
- SCOTUS (20 Feb 2026) ruling that economy-wide IEEPA tariffs are unconstitutional creates uncertainty about the legal durability of the 18% rate — Trump asserts the India deal holds regardless. [S7]
- Under WTO rules (GATT Art. I — MFN), bilateral tariff cuts must generally be extended to all WTO members unless under a formal FTA (Art. XXIV). The framework announced is not a certified FTA — potential WTO challenge possible. [S3]
- India's reciprocal commitment to reduce NTBs to zero will require domestic regulatory changes across sectors (agriculture SPS standards, IPR, digital data flows).
Administrative / Governance
- MEA had not fully responded to all Trump claims at announcement — signals possible gaps between what Trump said and what India formally committed to. [S4]
- Implementation requires India to pass or amend tariff schedules through the Union Budget / Customs Act mechanisms — not done by executive order alone in India's system.
- Commerce Ministry welcomed deal; full negotiation of a BTA (formal text) is still pending.
Historical
- Echoes the 1991 liberalization moment — India then opened to global capital under IMF pressure; now opening trade/energy policy under U.S. tariff pressure.
- Comparable to U.S.–Japan trade friction (1980s–90s) where bilateral pressure led to VERs (Voluntary Export Restraints) and market-opening commitments.
- India's strategic autonomy narrative (Nehruvian non-alignment → "multi-alignment") is tested — first time India formally committed to restricting a specific bilateral energy relationship (Russia) at U.S. behest.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- April 2025: Trump administration imposed 25% "reciprocal" tariffs on Indian goods under IEEPA.
- August 1, 2025: Additional 25% penalty tariff announced, citing India–Russia oil trade. [S5]
- 27 August 2025: 50% combined tariff becomes effective; Indian export sectors face severe disruption. [S6]
- 2 February 2026: Modi–Trump phone call; deal announced simultaneously on Truth Social and X. [S4]
- 6 February 2026: White House publishes formal Fact Sheet on the "historic trade deal." [S2]
- 7 February 2026: Executive Order removing the Russia-linked 25% tariff becomes effective. [S2]
- 20 February 2026: U.S. Supreme Court rules IEEPA-based sweeping tariffs unconstitutional; Trump says India deal unchanged. [S7]
- February 21, 2026: Reports confirm India-U.S. trade deal terms remain in place post-SCOTUS ruling. [S7]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The U.S. tariff on Indian goods was reduced to 18% on 2 February 2026 following a Modi–Trump phone call. [S1]
- Prior to the deal, U.S. had imposed a total of 50% additional tariff on Indian goods (25% reciprocal + 25% Russian-oil penalty). [S5]
- The additional 25% penalty tariff on India came into effect on 27 August 2025. [S6]
- U.S. tariffs on India were imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). [S7]
- India committed to purchase more than $500 billion worth of U.S. goods as part of the deal. [S1]
- India committed to reduce tariffs and non-tariff barriers (NTBs) against the U.S. to zero. [S1]
- India agreed to stop purchasing Russian oil as a condition of the tariff reduction. [S1][S2]
- The U.S. Supreme Court (20 February 2026) struck down IEEPA-based economy-wide tariffs as unconstitutional. [S7]
- The Russia-oil-linked 25% tariff was removed via Presidential Executive Order effective 7 February 2026. [S2]
- The announcement was made by Trump on Truth Social and by Modi on X (Twitter). [S4]
- India's External Affairs Ministry (MEA) had not formally responded to all of Trump's claims at the time of the announcement. [S4]
- India's GSP (Generalized System of Preferences) status was revoked by the U.S. in June 2019 — a precursor to later tariff tensions.
- Under WTO GATT Article I (MFN), bilateral tariff concessions not under a certified FTA may be challengeable by third countries.
- The deal is described as a trade framework — not a formally signed FTA with a legal text. [S3]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers: Primarily GS-II (International Relations); also GS-III (Indian Economy — External Sector, Trade Policy).
Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: Bilateral, regional and global groupings; India and its neighbourhood; Effect of policies of developed and developing countries on India's interests. - GS-III: Indian Economy and issues relating to planning; mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment; Effects of liberalisation on the economy, changes in industrial policy and their effects.
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The February 2026 U.S.–India trade deal is a pragmatic recalibration of India's foreign policy but at the cost of strategic autonomy." Critically examine. (GS-II) 2. "Evaluate the economic implications of India's commitment to cease Russian oil purchases and increase U.S. goods imports to $500 billion." Discuss its impact on India's current account and energy security. (GS-III) 3. "The use of IEEPA by the U.S. to impose sweeping tariffs raises fundamental questions about the rules-based international trade order. Analyse in the context of WTO obligations and the India–U.S. trade deal." (GS-II/GS-III)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| India–U.S. Strategic Partnership & Quad | Geopolitical context; the trade deal strengthens Quad alignment vs. China |
| India's Energy Security & Russian Oil Imports | Core condition of the deal; India's crude import diversification strategy |
| WTO Dispute Settlement & MFN Principle | Legal challenge risks; GATT Art. I, Art. XXIV FTA provisions |
| IEEPA & U.S. Trade Law | Statutory basis for Trump tariffs; SCOTUS ruling implications |
| India's Foreign Trade Policy (FTP 2023) | Domestic framework India uses to implement trade commitments |
| India–U.S. Relations: GSP Revocation (2019) | Historical precursor; pattern of bilateral trade friction |
| Current Account Deficit & BoP Management | Macro impact of $500 bn import commitment on India's external account |
| India's "Strategic Autonomy" Doctrine | Normative challenge: multi-alignment vs. alignment |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing the 18% with MFN rate: The 18% is the additional reciprocal tariff, not the total tariff including pre-existing MFN duties — the effective rate paid by Indian exporters is 18% + applicable MFN rate.
- Misidentifying the deal as a formal FTA: It is a trade framework/announcement, not a signed Free Trade Agreement with legal text — no Art. XXIV WTO coverage yet.
- Wrong date of 50% tariff: The 50% combined tariff came into effect on 27 August 2025 (not April 2025, which was only 25%); two separate tranches.
- Attributing the tariff removal solely to the phone call: The Executive Order formally removing the Russia-oil penalty tariff was signed on 6 Feb, effective 7 Feb 2026 — not on 2 Feb itself.
- Assuming SCOTUS ruling nullified the deal: The Supreme Court ruling (20 Feb 2026) on IEEPA does not automatically void the India deal — Trump asserted it remains in force; the legal status is contested.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Trump cuts India tariffs to 18% as Modi agrees to stop buying Russian oil" — Al Jazeera, 2 Feb 2026 — https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2026/2/2/trump-to-slash-us-tariffs-on-india-from-50-percent-to-18-percent — (Tier 4 / international journalism)
- [S2] "Fact Sheet: The United States and India Announce Historic Trade Deal" — White House, 6 Feb 2026 — https://www.whitehouse.gov/fact-sheets/2026/02/fact-sheet-the-united-states-and-india-announce-historic-trade-deal/ — (Primary/Official U.S. Government)
- [S3] "'Devil in the details': India–U.S. deal raises hopes for a reset" — CNBC, 3 Feb 2026 — https://www.cnbc.com/2026/02/03/us-india-trade-framework-tariffs-reset-modi-trump-new-delhi-russian-oil-venezuela.html — (Tier 4)
- [S4] "PM Narendra Modi announces Made in India products will now have reduced U.S. tariff of 18%" — Newsonair (All India Radio / Government of India) — https://www.newsonair.gov.in/pm-narendra-modi-announces-made-in-india-products-will-now-have-reduced-us-tariff-of-18 — (Tier 1 adjacent — Indian government broadcaster)
- [S5] "US imposes an additional 25 percent tariff on imports from India" — Newsonair, 26 Aug 2025 — https://www.newsonair.gov.in/us-imposes-an-additional-25-percent-tariff-on-imports-from-india — (Tier 1 adjacent)
- [S6] "50 penalty tariffs to come into effect from Aug 27 on India" — Deccan Herald — https://www.deccanherald.com/business/50-penalty-tariffs-to-come-into-effect-from-aug-27-on-india-which-sectors-to-be-hurt-most-3697381 — (Tier 4)
- [S7] "India–U.S. trade deal remains unchanged after U.S. Supreme Court tariff ruling" — Newsonair, 21 Feb 2026 — https://www.newsonair.gov.in/india-us-trade-deal-remains-unchanged-after-us-supreme-court-tariff-ruling-trump — (Tier 1 adjacent)
- [S8] "2025 United States–India diplomatic and trade crisis" — Wikipedia — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_United_States%E2%80%93India_diplomatic_and_trade_crisis — (Reference)
- [S9] The Hindu article (primary source excerpt) — "U.S. tariff on India cut to 18%, say Modi, Trump" by Kallol Bhattacherjee — The Hindu, 3 Feb 2026, p.1 International — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-03/th_international/articleGVBFHFOKB-13353849.ece — (Tier 4)