India and the European Union have announced the conclusion of
negotiations for a free trade agreement
India and the
European Union announced the conclusion of negotiations for a Free Trade
Agreement (FTA), an important milestone in one of India’s most strategic
economic partnerships.According to Commerce Ministry officials, the language in
the document will first be cleaned up over the next 10 to 15 days, following
which it will undergo “legal scrubbing”. It will then have to be translated and
sent to all 27 EU member states, before it can be ratified by the European
Parliament. Alongside the ‘ambitious FTA’, India is also entering into a new
India-EU Security and Defence Partnership and a system of mobility that would
allow secure and legal movement of Indians to the EU region.The two sides also
welcomed the launch of talks on a ‘Security of Information Agreement’ to
facilitate the exchange of classified information.
Key highlights of the Agreement
Timeline
¨
2007: India-EU FTA talks were first launched.
¨
2013: suspended due to differences in market access for automobiles.
¨
2022: Resumed with both sides agreeing to exclude issues on which
agreement had been elusive.
¨
2026: After almost two decades of negotiation, India and the European
Union (EU) finalised a free trade agreement (FTA), billed as the “mother of all
deals”.
Drop in tariffs
¨
EU drops tariffs on 99.5% of Indian exports.
¨
India has given tariff concessions on 97.5% of imports from the EU, with
European wines and luxury cars set to become less expensive.
¨
Gains for India: Tariff reductions across 97% of tariff lines, covering
99.5% of trade value.
¨
Of this, 90.7% of India’s exports will see duties eliminated entirely on
the first day of the deal’s implementation, including labour-intensive sectors
such as textiles, apparel, leather, footwear, tea, coffee, spices, sports
goods, toys, gems and jewellery, and certain marine products, amongst others.
¨
Another 2.9% of India’s exports will see duty elimination over three to
five years. This would include certain marine products, processed food items,
and arms and ammunition.
¨
Over and above this, 6% of India’s exports will see tariff reductions
including certain poultry products, preserved vegetables, bakery products,
amongst others.
India’s offer to the European Union: India is offering 92.1% of its
tariff lines which covers 97.5% of the EU exports, in particular:
¨
49.6% of tariff lines will have immediate duty elimination;
¨
39.5% of tariffs lines are subject to phased elimination over 5, 7, and
10 years’
¨
3% of products are under phased tariff reductions and few products are
subject to TRQs for Apples, Pears, Peaches, Kiwi Fruit.
Duty elimination for India: The following sectors that India primarily
exports to the EU, will see duties eliminated entirely
¨
marine products (current duties of up to 26%),
¨
chemicals (12.8% currently),
¨
plastic and rubber items (6.5%), leather footwear (17%),
¨
textiles and apparel (12% each),
¨
base metals (10%),
¨
gems and jewellery (4%),
¨
furniture and allied consumer goods (10.5%),
¨
toys and sports goods (4.7%).
On Service Sector:
The EU has agreed to commitments across 144 services sub-sectors, including
IT/ITeS, professional services, education, and other business services.
Quota-based systems:
For few sectors such as automobiles and wine.India agreed to allow European
cars with a price tag above ₹25 lakh to be imported at lower duties of as low
as 10%, from the current 110%, but subject to a quota.
Exclusion for sensitive sectors
¨
India’s strategic agricultural and dairy sectors remain protected
¨
EU will maintain its current tariffs on beef, sugar, rice, chicken meat,
milk powder, honey, bananas, soft wheat, garlic, and ethanol.
¨
No agreement on government procurement on Energy and raw materials.
¨
Limited agreement on the contentious Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism
(CBAM): The agreement creates a way for carbon footprint verifiers in India to
gain accreditation. It also specifies that, should the EU give concessions
under CBAM to a third country, those concessions would automatically apply to
India too.
Significance of the Agreement
¨
Geopolitical significance: The deal between two economies that together
account for a third of global trade in the shadow of uncertainty sparked by the
U.S. tariff regime.
¨
‘Largest-ever FTA’: This historic agreement will facilitate access to
the European market for Indian farmers and small industries, create new
opportunities in manufacturing, and strengthen cooperation in our services
sectors.
¨
Import Diversification: Imports of EU’s high technology goods are
expected to diversify India’s import sources, thereby reducing input costs for
businesses, benefit consumers and will create opportunities for Indian
businesses to integrate into global supply chains.
European Union (EU)
¨
The European Union (EU) is a supranational political and economic union
of 27 member states located primarily in Europe.
¨
Founded in 1993 with the Treaty of Maastricht (1992).
¨
19 of the 27 member states use the euro as their official currency.
¨
The EU is India’s largest trading partner, accounting for trade in goods
worth €120 billion in 2024, or 11.5% of India’s total trade.
India is the EU’s 9th largest trading partner, accounting for 2.4% of the EU’s total trade in goods in 2024, well behind the USA (17.3%), China (14.6%) or the UK (10.1%).