India-EU FTA to Boost Textiles, Leather & Handicrafts, Says NSE's Ashish Chauhan

NSE Managing Director Ashish Chauhan has hailed the India-EU Free Trade Agreement as a comprehensive pact that will significantly benefit India's labour-intensive sectors. He highlighted that the deal covers the $220 billion bilateral trade in goods and services, with a focus on areas like textiles, marine products, leather, and handicrafts. Chauhan noted that tariff reductions to near zero will enhance the competitiveness and value of Indian exports in these sectors. He also expressed confidence that the government would protect farmers' interests in ongoing negotiations for a potential India-US trade deal.

Key Points: India-EU FTA Benefits for Labour-Intensive Sectors

  • Comprehensive deal covering $220B trade
  • Benefits labour-intensive sectors like textiles & leather
  • Bilateral FTAs seen as more beneficial than past multilateral pacts
  • Could improve India's competitiveness in key areas
3 min read

India-EU FTA set to benefit India's labour-intensive sectors: NSE MD Ashish Chauhan

NSE MD Ashish Chauhan says the India-EU Free Trade Agreement will boost textiles, marine, leather, and handicraft exports by reducing tariffs to near zero.

"The tariffs are being reduced by almost all of them, close to zero, and that is ensuring that probably the value of goods, specifically in the labour-intensive areas, may go up in the future for India. - Ashish Chauhan"

Mumbai, January 27

Describing the India-European Union Free Trade Agreement as the most significant trade pact India has concluded so far, Ashish Chauhan, Managing Director and CEO of the National Stock Exchange, said the deal is comprehensive and is expected to benefit India across both goods and services, particularly labour-intensive sectors.

Speaking to ANI, Chauhan said, "Broadly the expectations were already built by calling it the mother of all FTAs few days back and I think and in some ways it's a very comprehensive FTA whatever has been announced."

Highlighting the scale of trade between India and the EU, he said, "The total trade between India and EU -- all countries put together -- is $220 billion in goods and services put together, out of which $135 billion on goods and the remaining are in services. Both areas are covered very well."

Chauhan said bilateral free trade agreements are more beneficial for India compared to earlier multilateral arrangements.

"Basically the way I look at it is they were not so fair to India. And the other countries were able to benefit much more, while the bilateral FTAs are going to be much more beneficial," he said.

He added that the India-EU FTA could help India gain ground in sectors where it was earlier less competitive.

"It is going to help India gain for the whole areas like textiles where similar countries were doing much more business in sectors like marine, leather, handicraft and many other areas," Chauhan said, noting that tariff reductions could improve competitiveness.

"The tariffs are being reduced by almost all of them, close to zero, and that is ensuring that probably the value of goods, specifically in the labour-intensive areas, may go up in the future for India," he added.

On the proposed India-US trade deal, Chauhan said negotiations are ongoing and he was sure the government would safeguard farmers' interests.

"It has been in negotiations for some time," he said "The way this government has been ensuring that the farmers' interests are taken care of, the small-scale workers are taken care of, that's how this particular deal has been signed, and probably as and when India US deal happens, we will have similar deals."

Turning to the Union Budget 2026-27, Chauhan said markets continue to expect tax concessions, though the government's ability to make major changes remains limited.

"The budget has always been creating expectations since India became independent, and post GST (rationalisation exercise), post direct tax code, the ability to change too many taxes is not there with the government," he said.

He added, "Of course market people continue to expect a lot of concessions, including reduction in GST, reduction in capital taxes - long term, short term, reduction in STT and many other things."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul R
$220 billion trade is massive. Reducing tariffs to near zero for our goods is a game-changer. But the real test will be in implementation. We need to ensure our MSMEs are ready to meet EU quality standards and compliance requirements. The government should launch massive awareness and handholding programs.
A
Ashwin V
While the optimism is good, I have a respectful criticism. Mr. Chauhan mentions it will help us gain ground in sectors where we were "less competitive." Why were we less competitive? We must address our own infrastructural bottlenecks and high logistics costs first, or the tariff advantage alone won't be enough.
S
Sarah B
As someone working in the leather export industry, this is the news we've been waiting for! The EU is a major market but the tariffs were a hurdle. This FTA can make Indian leather products much more price-competitive. Fingers crossed for a smooth rollout.
K
Karthik V
Good to see a focus on bilateral deals over multilateral ones. The WTO framework often felt skewed against developing nations like ours. Strategic partnerships like this with the EU are the way forward. Now, let's get that US deal done too, with proper safeguards for our farmers as mentioned.
M
Meera T
Labour-intensive sector growth means more jobs. That's the biggest takeaway for me. In a country with our demographic dividend, creating sustainable employment in manufacturing and services is crucial. Hope this pact delivers on that promise. 🤞

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