India's Cotton Import Duty Threatens Textile Competitiveness, Study Warns

A new study by the Confederation of Indian Textile Industry warns that India's 11% import duty on cotton is eroding the competitiveness of the textile sector. The report recommends a stable policy and a Rs 1,500 crore buffer for the Cotton Corporation of India. Stagnant farm yields and rising production costs further challenge the industry's USD 350 billion target by 2030. Textile exports fell 2.2% in FY26, highlighting the urgent need for reform.

Key Points: Cotton Import Duty Hurting India's Textile Sector: New Study

  • 11% cotton import duty hurts textile sector
  • Ad-hoc policy waivers create instability
  • CCI buffer of Rs 1,500 crore recommended
  • Stagnant farm yields limit growth
3 min read

India's cotton import duty hurting textile competitiveness, warns new Study

India's 11% cotton import duty is eroding textile competitiveness, warns a CITI study. It recommends a Rs 1,500 crore buffer and stable policy to boost exports.

"A thriving textile and apparel industry can be the farmer's strongest customer. - Ashwin Chandran"

New Delhi, May 7

A landmark study released by the Confederation of Indian Textile Industry on Thursday has sounded the alarm over India's 11 per cent import duty on cotton, warning that it is eroding the competitiveness of the country's textile and apparel sector at a time when the industry is chasing an ambitious USD 350 billion target by 2030.

The report, jointly prepared by global textile consultancy Gherzi and the International Cotton Advisory Committee (ICAC), examines cotton production, pricing, and trade policy across India's textile value chain and its findings make for uncomfortable reading for policymakers.

The study noted that ad-hoc waivers have done little to solve the problem. The import duty was temporarily lifted between August and December 2025, only to be reinstated on January 1, 2026. Industry experts say this stop-start approach has left mills unable to plan ahead.

"A stable and predictable policy is imperative to allow the mills to sustain their operations," the report stated, pointing out that competing Asian nations enjoy duty-free access to international cotton a gap that places Indian manufacturers at a serious disadvantage.

The report puts a concrete number on the solution. It recommends empowering the Cotton Corporation of India (CCI) to supply cotton to mills at internationally competitive prices, estimating this would require a government buffer of approximately Rs 1,500 crore annually to cover about 100 lakh bales roughly one third of the annual crop.

The study also recommends that the CCI maintain a strategic reserve equivalent to three months of consumption to cushion against price volatility, drawing a parallel with China's cotton reserve policy. A Cotton Price Stabilization Fund with a 5 per cent interest subvention is also proposed to ease working capital pressures during the peak procurement season from November to March.

Beyond trade policy, the report flags stagnant farm yields as a structural drag on the sector. Rising per-unit production costs, are limiting farmers ability to benefit from market opportunities even when prices are favorable.

CITI Chairman Ashwin Chandran framed the issue as one of mutual interest between farmers and industry. "A thriving textile and apparel industry can be the farmer's strongest customer," he said, invoking the government's 5F vision, Farm to Fibre to Factory to Fashion to Foreign.

The stakes are high. Textiles and apparel are India's second-largest employers and a significant contributor to GDP and export earnings. Yet the sector is already showing strain, as exports fell 2.2 per cent in dollar terms year-on-year in FY26, settling at USD 35.79 billion, making the road to USD 100 billion in exports by 2030 a steep climb.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
As someone from a farming family in Gujarat, I have mixed feelings. We want our cotton to be bought locally, but the import duty makes our own manufacturers uncompetitive against Bangladesh and Vietnam. The solution is to improve farm yields—our per-hectare production is way below global averages. Give farmers better seeds and irrigation, and we won't need to import so much foreign cotton.
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Vikram M
The 5F vision is great on paper, but without addressing the import duty issue, it's like trying to run with one leg tied. Our textile exports are falling—2.2% down in FY26—and global players are eating our lunch. The CCI buffer stock proposal makes sense; China does it successfully. Stop this see-saw policy and give us a Cotton Price Stabilization Fund already!
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Ananya R
Honestly, I'm tired of hearing about USD 350 billion targets when ground-level issues aren't fixed. Look at the small mills in Tirupur and Surat—they're struggling to survive because raw material costs are high and inconsistent. The ad-hoc waiver system only helps big players who can lobby. Small and medium units need a stable duty regime or complete removal. Study is right: predictabilty matters.
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James A
Interesting study but I question whether relying solely on the CCI is the answer. Government agencies have a mixed track record with efficiency in India. The buffer stock idea sounds good, but implementation and transparency will be key. Maybe a public-private partnership for cotton procurement could work better? Just a thought from someone who follows global textile supply chains. ️
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Rohit P

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