India–EU trade deal: Duty cuts on cars, wines and labour-intensive sectors likely
India is pushing for zero-duty access for textiles, leather, apparel, gems, jewellery and handicrafts.
PTI
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EU Chief Ursula Von Der Leyen is in India to seal the trade deal with PM Narendra Modi (X/@narendramodi)
New Delhi, 26 Jan
Import duty cuts on labour-intensive sectors such as textiles and footwear, as well as cars, and wines, are likely to be part of the free trade agreement between India and the 27-nation bloc European Union (EU), the conclusion of which is set to be announced on 27 January here, sources said.
They
said the pact is also expected to include liberalisation of norms in several
service sectors.
India
has pushed for zero-duty access for its labour-intensive sectors such as
textiles, leather, apparel, gems and jewellery, and handicrafts. This has been
a key demand in all free trade agreements (FTAs), finalised by India. This is
one of the key demands and has been met in each one of them, including with the
UK, the UAE, and Australia.
On the
other hand, the EU has been demanding duty reductions for its automobiles and
alcoholic beverages, including wines. India has granted quota-based tariff
concessions in its trade pact with the UK in the automobile sector. Wines are
part of trade deals with Australia and New Zealand.
India
has provided duty concessions to Australian wines in a phased manner over a
period of 10 years.
In
September last year, Commerce Secretary Rajesh Agarwal, who was then a special
secretary, said the proposed trade pact with the EU will provide huge
opportunities for the domestic auto industry to boost exports and forge new
partnerships with leading automobile giants from the 27-nation bloc.
Under
the India-UK trade pact, signed in May 2025, tariffs on automotive imports will
be reduced from over 100 per cent to 10 per cent under quotas on both sides.
India
has included adequate safeguards in the FTA with the UK to protect its sensitive
sectors. In the automobile segment, the import duty will be reduced over a
10-15-year period.
India
and the European Union are set to announce on 27 January the conclusion of
negotiations and the finalisation of an FTA. The pact is nearing the finishing
line after 18 years of negotiations. The talks started in 2007.
The EU's
tariffs on Indian goods are about 3.8 per cent, but labour-intensive sectors
attract about 10 per cent import duty. India's weighted average duty on EU
goods is about 9.3 per cent, with particularly high duties on automobiles,
parts (35.5 per cent), plastics (10.4 per cent), and chemicals and
pharmaceuticals (9.9 per cent).
India
imposes a duty of 100-125 per cent on alcoholic beverages.
Sensitive
agriculture issues have been kept out of the deal. The EU has been protective
of its beef, sugar and rice markets. India, on the other hand, has protected
its farm and dairy sectors from competition, as the livelihoods of large
numbers of small and marginal farmers depend on them.
In an
FTA, two sides reduce or eliminate import duties on over 90 per cent of goods
traded between them.
A trade
deal also includes easing of norms to promote trade in services sectors such as
telecommunications, transportation, accounting, and auditing.
Besides
FTA, the two are also negotiating a pact in investment protection and
Geographical Indications (GI). The India-EU FTA covers 24 chapters, including
trade in goods, and services.
India's
bilateral trade in goods with the EU was USD 136.53 billion in 2024-25 (exports
worth USD 75.85 billion and imports worth USD 60.68 billion), making the EU
India's largest goods trading partner. The services trade in 2024 was USD 83.10
billion.
India
had a trade surplus of USD 15.17 billion in 2024-25.
The EU
market accounts for about 17 per cent of India's total exports, and the bloc's
exports to India constitute 9 per cent of its total overseas shipments.




