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India News Updated Jun 19, 2026

India and Uzbekistan Aim to Double Bilateral Trade in 3 Years

India and Uzbekistan have agreed to deepen economic cooperation and double bilateral trade to $2.6 billion within three years. The agreement came after the 14th session of the Intergovernmental Commission, co-chaired by Commerce Secretary Rajesh Agrawal and Deputy Minister Shokhrukh Gulamov. Key areas of focus include pharmaceuticals, digital cooperation, and resolving non-tariff barriers to facilitate trade. Both sides also emphasized improving transport and logistics connectivity to unlock full economic potential.

India, Uzbekistan aim to double bilateral trade in next 3 years, address non-tariff barriers

New Delhi, June 19

India and Uzbekistan have agreed to deepen economic cooperation, address non-tariff barriers and work towards doubling bilateral trade within the next three years, following the 14th Session of the India-Uzbekistan Intergovernmental Commission on Trade, Economic, Scientific and Technological Cooperation, Commerce Ministry said on Friday.

The meeting was co-chaired by Commerce Secretary Rajesh Agrawal and Uzbekistan's Deputy Minister of Investment, Industry and Trade Shokhrukh Gulamov, according to a statement issued by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry.

Both sides welcomed the continued growth in bilateral trade. Uzbekistan reported that trade turnover with India reached USD 1.3 billion in 2025, up 33.3 per cent from the previous year. Its exports to India stood at USD 164.6 million, while imports from India reached USD 1.15 billion.

The two countries discussed expanding trade across sectors such as pharmaceuticals, medical devices, agricultural products, engineering goods, electronics, automobiles and auto components, textiles, chemicals, healthcare, education and tourism services.

Pharmaceuticals emerged as a key area of cooperation, with India highlighting its role as the "Pharmacy of the World" and its capacity to supply affordable and quality-assured medicines, vaccines and active pharmaceutical ingredients.

On digital cooperation, India showcased its strengths in information technology, digital public infrastructure, fintech, cybersecurity and digital logistics. The Indian side also proposed cooperation on customs data exchange and exploring interlinking of payment infrastructure to facilitate trade and tourism.

Trade facilitation was another major focus of the meeting. Agrawal said that "non-tariff barriers relating to approvals, standards, testing, certification, customs procedures and market-access requirements need regular review."

He added that "a time-bound mechanism on resolving non-tariff barriers to trade would help convert goodwill into trade outcomes."

The two sides also underlined the importance of strengthening transport and logistics connectivity to unlock the full economic potential of bilateral trade.

The Commission agreed to hold its 15th meeting in India on a mutually convenient date, reaffirming their commitment to expanding trade, improving regulatory cooperation and strengthening economic ties.

— ANI

Reader Comments

James A

Interesting development. The 33% growth in trade is impressive, but India's exports dwarf Uzbekistan's exports. Need to ensure this is a mutually beneficial partnership, not just one-sided.

Priya S

Finally some focus on Central Asia! We always talk about trade with China and West, but Uzbekistan has huge potential for textiles and agriculture. Hope they resolve those customs hassles quickly. Our textile exporters will benefit a lot.

Michael C

Good to see India expanding its global footprint. The digital cooperation on payment infrastructure linking is a smart move - will make transactions smoother for businesses and tourists alike. 👏

Vikram M

I hope they focus on improving transport connectivity - that's the real bottleneck. Without good logistics links, even the best trade agreements won't reach full potential. And those non-tariff barriers... they need a time-bound resolution mechanism as mentioned. Good step forward! 🚛

Sarah B

The $1.15 billion import figure from India suggests there's demand. But I wonder if Indian companies are facing any regulatory hurdles in Uzbekistan. Need to ensure our businesses get a level playing field there.

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

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