Key Points

India and the UK have signed a groundbreaking free trade agreement that strategically repositions their economic relationship. The deal aims to bypass traditional trade dependencies while opening new opportunities across multiple sectors. By reducing tariffs and facilitating professional exchanges, both nations are creating a flexible, forward-looking trade framework. This agreement represents a significant milestone in post-Brexit global economic diplomacy.

Key Points: India-UK Trade Deal Bypasses China Reshapes Global Strategy

  • Covers 90% tariff lines with potential bilateral trade doubling by 2030
  • Enables professional mobility and cultural diplomacy
  • Targets sectors like IT, finance, and technology exchange
2 min read

India-UK FTA bypasses China's dependence, navigates US tariffs: SBI report

Landmark India-UK Free Trade Agreement signals strategic economic shift, reducing tariffs and expanding bilateral opportunities beyond traditional dependencies.

"India-UK FTA is a dialectical moment in twenty-first-century trade philosophy - SBI Economic Research Report"

New Delhi, May 7

India and the United Kingdom have signed a landmark free trade agreement (FTA), momentous not only in quantitative magnitude -- encompassing reductions across 90 per cent of tariff lines -- but also in its emblematic stature as a recalibration of post-globalisation economic strategy, an SBI report said on Wednesday.

The FTA signal a new global trade strategy, bypassing China's dependence, navigating US tariffs and reshaping post BREXIT Britain.

The FTA takes place in the backdrop of growing economic relations between India and the UK as exemplified in the bilateral trade of about $60 billion which is projected to double by 2030.

India's exports in FY25 outpaced a 6.1 per cent contraction in imports. The FTA, spanning goods, services, and technology, seeks to foster inclusive growth, resilient supply chains, and employment generation, according to the report by State Bank of India's Economic Research Department.

Liberalisation in the UK sectors such as IT, finance, education, and consumer goods unlocks labour-intensive export potential in Indian industries like textiles, toys, marine products, and auto components.

"While immigration policy remains static, the accord enables select professional mobility - around 1,800-2,000 visas annually for chefs, musicians, and yogis--fusing economic pragmatism with cultural diplomacy," said the report.

Milestone features include expanded access to telecom and renewables, digital trade facilitation, emphasis on green goods, reciprocal social security arrangements, and UK access to Indian public procurement as class-2 suppliers.

Concurrently, India advances negotiations with the EU, Australia, Peru, Sri Lanka, and Oman, and reviews existing pacts with South Korea and ASEAN -- signalling a broader strategic reconstitution of its global trade architecture.

"India-UK FTA is not merely a transactional accord but a dialectical moment in the evolution of twenty-first-century trade philosophy--where national interest and moral purpose converge in a new synthesis of strategic liberalism," the report noted.

India has signed 13 FTAs with its trading partners. The country is currently negotiating the following FTAs with its trading partners: India-EU FTA, India Australia Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA), India-Peru Trade Agreement, covering goods, services and investment, India-Sri Lanka Economic and Technical Cooperation Agreement (ETCA) and India-Oman FTA.

Moreover, India has also initiated review of its existing FTAs, namely, India-South Korea Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA), and ASEAN-India Trade in Goods Agreement (AITIGA).

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rajesh K.
This is a game-changer for Make in India! 🇮🇳 Finally reducing dependence on Chinese imports while creating jobs in textiles and auto sectors. The visa provisions for chefs and yogis are brilliant - soft power meets economic benefits. Hope similar FTAs follow with EU soon.
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Priya M.
While the FTA looks promising, I'm concerned about small businesses keeping up with quality standards. The govt should provide handholding support to MSMEs to benefit from this deal. Also, 2000 visas is too small - should negotiate more for IT professionals.
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Amit S.
Smart move to diversify from China! But why only 90% tariff lines? Should aim for 100% coverage. The renewable energy and digital trade aspects excite me most. Hope this makes solar panels cheaper for our homes.
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Sunita R.
As someone whose husband works in textiles, this gives me hope for better days ahead 🙏 The marine products inclusion is excellent for coastal states. But government must ensure benefits reach actual workers, not just big companies.
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Vikram J.
The strategic thinking behind this is impressive - using trade to strengthen geopolitical ties post-Brexit. The cultural diplomacy angle with yoga/chefs is clever. But we must be careful about opening public procurement - need strong safeguards for Indian companies.
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Neha T.
Good step but implementation is key! Our past FTAs haven't always benefited India proportionately. Hope this time proper monitoring mechanisms are in place. The $60bn to $120bn projection seems ambitious but achievable if we play our cards right.

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