Source: The post India’s Trade Resilience Amid US Tariff Pressures has been created, based on the article “Keeping Growth out of the US tariff Shadow” published in “Hindustan times” on 3 September 2025.

UPSC Syllabus Topic: GS Paper- 2- Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India’s interests
Context: In recent times, the imposition of U.S.A. tariffs on Indian exports such as steel, aluminium, textiles, and pharmaceuticals threatens to slow growth and weaken job creation. At the same time, the U.S.A. continues to benefit from services, education, and royalties, making the trade relationship both asymmetric and sensitive.
Impact of US Tariffs on India
- GDP growth under strain: U.S.A tariffs could shave off 20–50 basis points from India’s annual GDP growth, weakening momentum at a time of slowing global demand.
- Pressure on labour-intensive sectors: Industries such as textiles, leather, gems and jewellery, and auto components, which employ millions, are the worst hit by tariff shocks.
- Investor sentiment affected: Rising U.S.A protectionism creates uncertainty in markets, as investors are highly sensitive to political signals from Washington.
Challenges for India’s Trade Strategy
- Export basket vulnerability: India’s exports are still concentrated in low-value, labour-intensive sectors, making them highly susceptible to tariff actions.
- Slow diversification: Without fast-track trade deals with partners like the EU, UK, and ASEAN, India remains dependent on a narrow set of export destinations.
- Costlier imports: Tariffs on raw materials and intermediate goods drive up input costs for Indian manufacturing, reducing competitiveness.
Opportunities for Strategic Response
- Negotiating from confidence: India must leverage its growing market and services strength to secure better trade terms rather than reacting defensively.
- Moving up the value chain: Like South Korea and Taiwan, India can build credibility by specialising in high-value sectors and steadily upgrading its role in the global chain.
- Supportive government measures: Steps like GST rationalisation, corporate tax cuts, and liquidity for MSMEs can provide a buffer, but more targeted interventions are required.
- Diversifying global role: Focusing on chemicals, services, electronics, and logistics can reduce dependence on tariff-sensitive industries.
Way Forward
- Calibrated trade policy: India must avoid knee-jerk protectionism and instead deepen integration into global supply chains through disciplined policies.
- Boosting competitiveness: Long-term resilience requires investment in infrastructure, logistics, and technology to reduce costs and attract global capital.
- Turning challenge into opportunity: With pragmatic reforms, India can transform tariff shocks into a springboard for sustainable economic growth.
Question: Analyse the impact of US tariffs on India’s trade prospects and suggest measures for resilience.




