UPSC Syllabus: Gs Paper 2- International Relation.
Introduction
India’s trade strategy in a multipolar world is shaped by rising exports, ambitious free trade agreements, and a clear goal of reaching $2 trillion exports by 2030 under the 2023 Foreign Trade Policy. In 2025, total exports reached $825.25 billion with 6.05% growth. Trade is now linked with strategic autonomy, supply chains, and national security in a fragmented global order.
The Shift in India’s Trade Approach
- From cautious FTAs to active engagement: For many years, India signed agreements mainly with similar developing economies. Now it pursues comprehensive FTAs with major developed economies that were earlier beyond reach.
- Expansion of FTA coverage: India’s FTA network is projected to cover 71% of its export basket by 2026, up from 22% in 2019, showing a decisive policy shift.
- Integration with advanced markets: Agreements with Australia, the EU, the UAE, the U.K., and the U.S. show a move from regional focus to deeper integration with high-value economies.
- Balancing domestic strength and global openness: After opting out of RCEP, India adopted a calibrated strategy by boosting domestic manufacturing through production-linked incentives and infrastructure expansion while deepening global integration.
Major Trade Agreements as Strategic Milestones
- India–EU Free Trade Agreement:
- Signed on January 27, 2026, it creates a free trade zone of nearly two billion people and reduces or eliminates tariffs on over 90% of traded goods.
- Sectoral gains under the EU deal: It boosts textiles, leather, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, and marine products, enhances regulatory cooperation, lowers production costs through easier access to advanced machinery, and promotes digital trade and investor confidence.
- Improved competitiveness and MSME integration: The EU agreement strengthens India’s position against Bangladesh and Vietnam and integrates MSMEs into Global Value Chains.
- U.S. interim reciprocal trade framework:
- Signed in February 2026, it reduces tariffs progressively and advances negotiations toward a broader Bilateral Trade Agreement.
- Strategic sector cooperation with the U.S.: Collaboration in rare earths and semiconductors supports high-technology manufacturing and strengthens India’s role as a reliable electronics and semiconductor hub.
- Diversification and flexibility: These agreements reduce overdependence on specific markets and enhance strategic and economic flexibility.
Trade in the Context of Global Transformation
- Blurring of trade and national security: Economic coercion, technological exclusion, and supply chain weaponisation now directly affect sovereignty.
- Integration and fragmentation together: Sanctions, export controls, industrial regulations, and technology limits increasingly shape cross-border flows.
- Power through system control: Influence depends on control over payment systems, logistics networks, standards bodies, and compliance infrastructure, not only trade volume.
- Weakening of multilateral discipline: The erosion of global trade governance shows that rules alone cannot constrain major powers.
- Chokepoints as pressure tools: Financial sanctions, semiconductor export restrictions, and shipping or insurance disruptions show how economic access can be limited without military conflict.
Strategic Dimensions of India’s Trade Policy
- Preferential access to high-demand markets: Engagement with advanced economies strengthens export potential and supports labour-intensive sectors and MSMEs.
- Integration into global supply chains: Reduction of barriers on exports and intermediate imports improves competitiveness in technology, electronics, pharmaceuticals, and services.
- Export diversification across continents: Agreements across regions enhance economic resilience and reduce vulnerability to market concentration.
- Enhanced diplomatic leverage: Deeper economic interdependence strengthens India’s voice in global economic governance and trade norm-setting.
Way Forward
- Building platform power: India must influence the systems and standards that govern trade to reduce structural vulnerability.
- Focus on operational systems: Priority should be given to compliance systems, logistics coordination, payment infrastructure, and trusted digital verification frameworks.
- Reimagining services and digital trade: India should move from executing services to building trusted systems such as digital identity, secure payments, and automated compliance.
- Institutional reforms and speed: Integrated doctrine, mission-driven governance, predictable data rules, standards participation, modular system export, and faster institutional response are necessary to strengthen long-term resilience.
Conclusion
India’s trade strategy combines export expansion, diversification, and strategic engagement with major economies. In a fragmented global order, sovereignty depends on resilience and freedom of choice. By deepening FTAs, strengthening supply chains, and building trusted trade systems, India aims to move from being a large market to becoming a rule-shaping and system-influencing power in global commerce.
Source – The Hindu




