BTA: India, US eye ‘early mutual wins’ before concluding 1st phase

Update: 2025-04-29 18:28 GMT

New Delhi: India and the US are exploring opportunities for an interim trade arrangement in goods to secure “early mutual wins” ahead of finalising the first phase of the proposed bilateral trade agreement by fall of this year.

The Commerce Ministry said on Tuesday that both the countries have initiated sectoral level talks and more engagements are planned from May end.

To give an impetus to the talks, India’s chief negotiator Rajesh Agrawal, additional secretary in the department of commerce, and Assistant US Trade Representative for South and Central Asia Brendan Lynch held a three-day talks last week in Washington.

During the meetings in Washington, the teams deliberated on wide-ranging subjects including tariff and non-tariff matters.

“The team discussed the pathway for concluding the first tranche of the mutually beneficial, multi-sector bilateral trade agreement (BTA) by fall (September-October) of 2025, including...opportunities for early mutual wins,” the ministry said in a statement.

An official said that an interim agreement with regard to trade in goods could take place as part of early mutual wins in case both sides agree.

“Initially we are focusing on goods. The non-tariff barriers being flagged by Indian side included in sectors such as marine,” the official said, adding the formal first round of negotiations are expected to start after the May meetings.

These deliberations assume significance as the US has suspended the additional 26 per cent tariffs on India till July 9. Both the nations want to take advantage of this window to push the trade talks.

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Monday said that India is likely to be among the first countries to finalise a bilateral trade agreement with the US to avert reciprocal tariffs by President Donald Trump.

“Negotiations with our Asian trading partners are going very well. Vice President (JD) Vance was in India last week and talked about substantial progress. I have mentioned that the negotiations with the Republic of Korea have gone very well. And I think we’ve had some very substantial negotiations with our Japanese allies,” Bessent said during an interview with CNBC’s Squawk Box.

India is seeking duty concessions for labour-intensive sectors like textiles, gems and jewellery, leather goods, garments, plastics, chemicals, shrimp, oil seeds, chemicals, grapes and bananas in the proposed pact with America.

On the other hand, the US wants duty concessions in sectors like certain industrial goods, automobiles (EVs particularly), wines, petrochemical products, dairy, agriculture items such as apples, and tree nuts, they said.

The terms of references (ToRs) for the BTA have been finalised by India and the US for the proposed agreement, which include around 19 chapters covering issues such as tariffs, goods, services, rules of origin, non-tariff barriers, and customs facilitation.

On April 22 in Jaipur, US Vice President J D Vance urged India to drop non-tariff barriers, give greater access to its markets. Indian products too face these issues in the international markets including in America, EU, China, Japan, and Korea.

According to the 2025 National Trade Estimate (NTE) Report on Foreign Trade Barriers of the US, India maintains various forms of non-tariff barriers such as banned or prohibited items that are denied entry into India (e.g., tallow, fat, and oils of animal origin); items that require a non-automatic import licence (e.g., certain livestock products, pharmaceuticals, certain chemicals, certain IT products); and items that are importable only by government trading monopolies and are subject to cabinet approval regarding import timing and quantity (e.g., corn under a tariff-rate quota).

The report has also stated that India imposes Technical Barriers to Trade such as mandatory quality control orders, and compulsory domestic testing and certification requirements for equipment.

Meanwhile, the US Trade Representative’s 2025 Special 301 report has again placed India on its ‘priority watch list’ stating that New Delhi remains one of the world’s most challenging major economies in terms of protection and enforcement of intellectual property rights. It said that although India has worked to strengthen its IP regime, there continues to be a lack of progress on many long-standing IP concerns.

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