50% tariff on India effects from today
India faces a 50% tariff on goods exported to the US, effective today, as imposed by the Donald Trump administration. The tariffs will impact Rs 4,00,060 crore worth of Indian export merchandise to America.
Meanwhile, as trade talks between the two nations continue to stall, the govt is exploring multiple ways to minimise the effects of the punitive tariffs. Discussions are ongoing between India and the US regarding a bilateral trade agreement (BTA). The US delegation’s visit to India, planned for August 25, has been deferred.
The calculation behind the tariff math is 25 per cent taxes plus a 25 per cent penalty that has been imposed in response to “threats to the United States by the government of the Russian Federation”, and penalises India for buying Russian oil directly or indirectly.
Nearly half of India’s exports, worth $87.3 billion, will be hit by the 50 per cent tariffs. The sectors that will be affected include textiles, apparel, gems and jewellery, seafood, leather goods, steel, aluminium, copper, organic chemicals and handicrafts.
Massive Tax Bonanza:
Facing the economic turbulence triggered by recent tariff hikes, the Indian government has gone into damage control. Earlier this month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi pledged tax relief measures to soften the blow, promising a significant cut aimed at supporting both everyday citizens and the backbone of the economy—India’s small businesses.
In a symbolic and impassioned speech from the ramparts of Delhi’s Red Fort on Independence Day, Modi—sporting a vivid saffron turban—announced what he called a “Massive Tax Bonanza” coming as a Diwali gift. He also renewed his call for economic self-reliance, urging shopkeepers and entrepreneurs to proudly display signs reading “Swadeshi” or “Made in India” at their storefronts.
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“We must strive for self-reliance—not because we are forced to, but because we take pride in it,” Modi declared to an enthusiastic crowd. “In a world increasingly driven by economic self-interest, India must rise above challenges, not bow down to them.”
Since then, he has reiterated this message in at least two more public speeches, reinforcing a clear push toward domestic production and national economic resilience.
Last year, the United States imported $87 billion worth of goods from India, compared to about $42 billion in American goods exported to India, according to Commerce Department data. As Trump ramped up tariffs on China in his first term and earlier this year, American businesses were incentivized to seek out alternative production locations like India.
The top goods the US received from India last year included pharmaceuticals, communications equipment, such as smartphones, and apparel. Smartphones, however, are exempt from so-called “reciprocal” tariffs, which includes the 50% tax on Indian goods.