India-New Zealand FTA: A Landmark Women-Led Trade Pact

The India-New Zealand Free Trade Agreement is India's first women-led FTA, with a majority-female negotiation team. The pact grants 100% duty-free access for Indian exports to New Zealand. It also facilitates $20 billion in investment and includes provisions for skilled Indian workers and student mobility. The agreement, signed by PM Modi and PM Luxon, was concluded in a record nine months.

Key Points: India-New Zealand FTA: First Women-Led Trade Deal

  • First women-led FTA for India
  • 100% duty-free access for Indian exports to New Zealand
  • $20 billion investment into India
  • 5,000 visas for skilled Indians, plus student mobility provisions
3 min read

Trade pact with New Zealand is India's first women-led FTA: Piyush Goyal

India and New Zealand sign a historic FTA led by women negotiators. Piyush Goyal announces duty-free access for Indian exports, $20 billion investment, and new visa provisions.

"A truly win-win partnership that advances the vision of Viksit Bharat, strengthens India-New Zealand ties, and sets a new benchmark for inclusive and trusted global cooperation. - Piyush Goyal"

New Delhi, April 27

The India-New Zealand FTA is India's first women-led Free Trade Agreement and a defining milestone in the bilateral economic journey of the two countries, Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal said on Monday.

The minister was referring to the fact that a majority of the negotiation team was composed of women, including the chief negotiator, deputy negotiator, and sectoral leads. The landmark trade deal, promoted by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, is seen as a milestone for both gender inclusivity in trade negotiations and a boost for domestic industries and international trade relations.

Signed under the leadership of Prime Minister Modi and his New Zealand counterpart, Chris Luxon, the agreement was successfully concluded in a record nine months, with the steadfast efforts of New Zealand Trade Minister Todd McClay and both negotiating teams. This landmark agreement reflects deep mutual trust, shared ambition, and a common commitment to prosperity, Goyal said.

"It grants 100 per cent duty-free access for Indian exports to New Zealand, opening significant opportunities for MSMEs, farmers, women, youth, professionals and job-creating sectors, while safeguarding India's sensitive interests through a balanced and calibrated framework," he said.

Goyal said that this forward-looking agreement will also facilitate $20 billion of investment into India, deepening cooperation in trade, services, investment, innovation, mobility, agriculture productivity and education, and creating pathways for skilled talent and students.

"A truly win-win partnership that advances the vision of Viksit Bharat, strengthens India-New Zealand ties, and sets a new benchmark for inclusive and trusted global cooperation," he remarked.

Besides, the FTA includes several provisions relating to the mobility of working professionals and students. New Zealand has signed an annex on student mobility and post-study work visas for the first time with any country. Under this, Indian students can work up to 20 hours per week while studying in New Zealand, with extended post-study work visas.

Further, the agreement includes a quota of 5,000 visas for skilled Indians for a stay of up to three years in the sectors of interest to India, which include AYUSH practitioners, yoga instructors, chefs, and music teachers, as well as other key sectors such as IT, engineering, healthcare, education, and construction.

Under the Working Holiday Visa programme included in the agreement, 1,000 young Indians annually can avail multiple entries in New Zealand for a period of 12 months.

India has also managed to keep several items out of the FTA, including all dairy products such as milk, cream, whey, yoghurt and cheese as well as agricultural produce such as onions.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rajesh Q
Good initiative, but I hope the dairy and agriculture exemptions hold strong. Our farmers and small dairy producers are the backbone of rural India—they can't compete with New Zealand's massive subsidies. The 100% duty-free access is great for MSMEs though. Let's see how it plays out.
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Vikram M
Fantastic news for the youth! 🎓 My younger brother is planning to study in New Zealand, and knowing they've signed a student mobility annex for the first time with India is reassuring. 20 hours work per week plus post-study visas—this makes studying abroad much more accessible. Modi ji's vision of Viksit Bharat is taking shape!
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Sneha F
This is a well-negotiated deal. Keeping dairy and onions out shows our negotiators understood the sensitivities. The women-led aspect is inspiring—hope this becomes a model for future FTAs. The $20 billion investment commitment is huge for infrastructure and job creation. Truly a win-win.
K
Karthik V
Record nine months! That's incredible speed for an FTA. 🇮🇳 The inclusion of AYUSH practitioners and yoga instructors in the visa quota is a smart move—we're exporting our traditional knowledge too. Hope this boosts tourism and cultural exchange between both countries. Great step forward.
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Pooja D
Honestly, while I celebrate the women-led aspect, let's not forget that FTAs have mixed results for local industries. The MSME sector needs robust support—duty-free access is wonderful only if our small businesses can actually scale up and meet

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