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India News Updated May 15, 2026

India-Africa Trade Hits $93.69 Billion in 2025-26, Up 14.39%

India-Africa bilateral trade reached $93.69 billion in 2025-26, marking a 14.39% growth. Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal highlighted the potential for a more inclusive future for the Global South. He called for moving beyond raw material trade towards higher-value products and technology-driven cooperation. Key sectors for future collaboration include agriculture, renewable energy, and digital infrastructure.

India-Africa bilateral trade reaches $93.69 billion in 2025-26

New Delhi, May 15

Bilateral trade between India and Africa reached $93.69 billion in 2025-26, registering a growth of 14.39 per cent over the previous year, according to the government.

India's exports to Africa stood at $45.42 billion, while imports reached $48.27 billion during the same period.

According to Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal, India and Africa together can shape a more inclusive, resilient, and innovation-driven future for the Global South.

Addressing a curtain-raiser event for the forthcoming India-Africa Business Dialogue (IABD) and Exhibition, the minister emphasised the need to build upon existing trade ties and preferential trade frameworks by aligning standards, customs procedures and business practices to facilitate faster and smarter growth for businesses on both sides.

Highlighting the immense economic potential of collaboration between India and Africa, he noted that the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), valued at nearly $3.4 trillion, together with India's rapidly expanding $4 trillion economy, presents immense opportunities to create resilient partnerships, diversify supply chains, and move beyond raw material trade towards higher-value manufacturing and integrated value chains.

He further underlined the importance of technology transfer and youth-driven growth in shaping the future of India-Africa cooperation.

Stressing that nearly two-thirds of the population of India and Africa was below the age of 35, he called for greater focus on skilling, startups, innovation ecosystems, and talent development to prepare the workforce for industries of the future.

Goyal underlined that the next phase of India-Africa partnership must move beyond traditional raw material trade towards higher-value products, integrated supply chains, local manufacturing and technology-driven cooperation.

He identified agriculture and food processing, digital public infrastructure, healthcare and pharmaceuticals, renewable energy, critical minerals, electric mobility, manufacturing, defence production, and emerging technologies as key sectors for future collaboration.

The IABD and Exhibition is envisioned as a premier platform to deepen economic and strategic engagement between India and African nations through enhanced trade, investment, technology partnerships, and people-to-people collaboration.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Ravi K

Good growth numbers, but we need to be cautious. While trade is increasing, our imports from Africa are higher than exports. We should focus more on value-added manufacturing and not just raw materials. The minister's vision about moving beyond raw trade is commendable, but implementation needs to be faster.

Arjun K

This is what global South cooperation should look like! India and Africa together can challenge the existing trade dynamics. The Africa Continental Free Trade Area is a game changer - combine that with India's manufacturing and IT prowess, and we have a winning formula. Exciting times ahead! 🚀

Sarah B

As someone working in renewable energy sector, the focus on solar panels and wind energy partnerships with Africa excites me. But I hope the government also addresses the logistical challenges - shipping costs and port delays are still major hurdles for small businesses wanting to trade with Africa.

Vikram M

The 14.39% growth is impressive but we must ensure this doesn't become a one-way street. Indian businesses should invest more in African manufacturing units, creating jobs locally. The 'Make in India' initiative should extend to 'Make with Africa'. That would be true partnership.

Michael C

Impressive numbers! The focus on digital public infrastructure and healthcare is smart - India's UPI and generic medicines can really help Africa leapfrog development stages. Just hope the promised technology transfers actually happen and don't get stuck in bureaucratic delays.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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