India-Vietnam Partnership to Boost Critical Input Access and Export Growth

The India-Vietnam Enhanced Comprehensive Strategic Partnership aims to improve India's access to critical inputs like rare earths and minerals, boosting sectors like EVs and semiconductors. The partnership sets a bilateral trade target of $25 billion by 2030, with agreements in pharma, digital payments, and electronics. Industry leaders highlight benefits for supply-chain resilience, manufacturing cooperation, and export growth. Both countries will also enhance market access for agricultural products and ease regulatory environments.

Key Points: India-Vietnam Enhanced Partnership: Key Benefits

  • $25 billion bilateral trade target by 2030
  • Enhanced access to rare earths and critical minerals for EVs, semiconductors
  • Regulatory cooperation to boost Indian pharma exports
  • Technology cooperation in AI, electronics, and digital value chains
2 min read

India-Vietnam partnership to improve access to critical inputs, export growth: Industry

India-Vietnam's new strategic partnership aims for $25B trade by 2030, improving access to rare earths, pharma exports, and tech cooperation.

"The bilateral partnership creates a stronger framework for supply-chain resilience, manufacturing cooperation, digital connectivity, and technology partnerships. - Rajeev Juneja"

New Delhi, May 7

Vietnam President To Lam's visit to India elevated bilateral ties to an Enhanced Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, and will improve India's access to critical inputs, generate substantial long-term benefits for exports, investments, and GDP growth, the industry chamber PHDCCI said on Thursday.

Rajeev Juneja, President, PHDCCI said that the bilateral partnership creates a stronger framework for supply-chain resilience, manufacturing cooperation, digital connectivity, and technology partnerships.

The new bilateral agreements align with India's initiatives of "Make in India", Digital India, pharmaceutical exports expansion, semiconductor and electronics ecosystem development, and diversification of critical mineral supply chains, he added.

Cooperation in rare earths and critical minerals will strengthen India's access to critical inputs required for electric vehicles, semiconductors, electronics, renewable energy, and defence manufacturing, supporting supply-chain security and advanced manufacturing growth.

Regulatory cooperation in pharmaceuticals will improve market access for Indian generic medicines and medical devices, which already enjoy significant competitive advantage.

Further, technology cooperation in electronics, semiconductors, AI, and IT services will strengthen India's role in global digital value chains.

Agricultural exports, tourism, aviation, urban infrastructure, and smart city development will also enjoy gains from the partnership, generating employment growth.

The outcomes of the visit reinforces India's "Act East Policy" by expanding strategic engagement with Southeast Asian countries.

Enhanced cooperation with Vietnam is expected to improve connectivity, trade resilience, and long-term industrial partnerships across critical sectors, said Dr. Ranjeet Mehta, SG & CEO, PHDCCI.

The new strategic partnership has set a bilateral trade target of $25 billion by 2030, and the President's visit produced multiple memoranda of understanding across sectors, including rare earths, digital payments, pharmaceuticals, electronics, tourism, culture, urban development, education, and technology cooperation.

Both sides will facilitate market access, including for agricultural products such as Indian grapes and pomegranates as well as Vietnamese durians and pomelos, a joint statement said after talks between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Vietnamese President To Lam.

Vietnam affirmed its commitment to diversifying its supply sources and to importing more products from India to serve its domestic production and export needs.

Both sides agreed to explore ways for a more conducive regulatory environment to facilitate ease of doing business for companies of both countries, including in standards compliance certification.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Great to see India strengthening ties with ASEAN countries. Vietnam has a strong manufacturing base, and this partnership could help our "Make in India" initiative. Especially interested in the digital payments MoU — that could be a game-changer for fintech.
J
James A
Interesting development. Vietnam's been a key manufacturing hub in Southeast Asia. This partnership could benefit both countries, especially in electronics and pharma. India's generic medicines could find good market access there.
V
Vikram M
The critical minerals angle is crucial. We shouldn't rely too much on China for rare earths. Vietnam is a good alternative. Also, agricultural exports like grapes and pomegranates — our farmers will benefit. But need to ensure small farmers aren't left out of this trade.
R
Rohit P
Good initiative, but we've seen many such MOUs before. The real test is execution. Also, $25 billion by 2030 is a big target — hope it's not just numbers on paper. The pharma and electronics sectors could really benefit if we handle it right.
S
Sarah B
Vietnam is a rising star in global trade. This partnership aligns well with India's Act East Policy. The semiconductor and AI cooperation mentioned could help India become a bigger player in tech. Let's hope it translates into real jobs.
K
Kavya N

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