India Defies US Trade Tariffs: Export Growth Soars Despite 50 Percent Duty Shock in 2025 Bilateral Relations
Update: 2025-12-17
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Welcome to India Tariff News and Tracker, your focused update on how US tariff policy under President Donald Trump is reshaping India–US trade.
According to the US Customs and Border Protection data reported in recent coverage of Trump’s 2025 trade policy, Washington has collected over 200 billion dollars in tariffs this year from a sweeping set of “reciprocal tariffs” on imports from most major trading partners, including India. One headline figure for our listeners: Indian goods entering the US are currently facing punitive tariffs of about 50 percent on many products, a rate that was doubled in August 2025 and has since become the defining number in India–US trade.
India has been hit particularly hard in sectors like engineering goods, textiles, and rice, with some Indian rice exports to the US also facing this 50 percent duty. Yet, despite these steep barriers, India’s export engine has proven remarkably resilient. Fibre2Fashion reports that India’s exports to the US in November jumped more than 22 percent year-on-year, outpacing India’s overall export growth of around 19 percent for the month. India Sea Trade News notes that the US tariff shock initially rattled exporters, but by November India’s trade deficit with the US had actually narrowed sharply as firms adapted and shifted to higher-value products.
This resilience is now translating into leverage at the negotiating table. India’s Commerce Secretary Rajesh Agrawal has stated that New Delhi and Washington are in advanced talks on a bilateral trade pact that could roll back the “reciprocal and penal” tariffs on Indian exports. He has described the engagement with the US as “very positive,” with both sides reviewing the state of negotiations on a broader Bilateral Trade Agreement and an accompanying framework deal. At the same time, Indian officials are in no hurry to close, with several reports noting that New Delhi is closely watching a looming US Supreme Court ruling that will decide the legality of Trump’s 2025 tariff actions. If those tariffs are struck down, the 50 percent duty wall on Indian goods would automatically fall, dramatically strengthening India’s hand.
Political context matters here. The Economic Times commentary on 2025 calls this year close to an “annus horribilis” for India–US ties: political goodwill is low, and the economic relationship is “reeling under 50% tariffs.” Yet trade flows and negotiations continue, and Indian policymakers appear to be betting that time, law, and their own export performance will eventually force a tariff reset.
For now, listeners should watch three key fronts: the 50 percent US tariff rate on Indian goods, the Supreme Court’s early-2026 ruling on Trump’s tariff authority, and the pace of the proposed India–US deal that could unwind at least part of this tariff shock.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an update on India’s evolving tariff landscape. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/
Avoid ths tariff fee's and check out these deals https://amzn.to/4iaM94Q
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
According to the US Customs and Border Protection data reported in recent coverage of Trump’s 2025 trade policy, Washington has collected over 200 billion dollars in tariffs this year from a sweeping set of “reciprocal tariffs” on imports from most major trading partners, including India. One headline figure for our listeners: Indian goods entering the US are currently facing punitive tariffs of about 50 percent on many products, a rate that was doubled in August 2025 and has since become the defining number in India–US trade.
India has been hit particularly hard in sectors like engineering goods, textiles, and rice, with some Indian rice exports to the US also facing this 50 percent duty. Yet, despite these steep barriers, India’s export engine has proven remarkably resilient. Fibre2Fashion reports that India’s exports to the US in November jumped more than 22 percent year-on-year, outpacing India’s overall export growth of around 19 percent for the month. India Sea Trade News notes that the US tariff shock initially rattled exporters, but by November India’s trade deficit with the US had actually narrowed sharply as firms adapted and shifted to higher-value products.
This resilience is now translating into leverage at the negotiating table. India’s Commerce Secretary Rajesh Agrawal has stated that New Delhi and Washington are in advanced talks on a bilateral trade pact that could roll back the “reciprocal and penal” tariffs on Indian exports. He has described the engagement with the US as “very positive,” with both sides reviewing the state of negotiations on a broader Bilateral Trade Agreement and an accompanying framework deal. At the same time, Indian officials are in no hurry to close, with several reports noting that New Delhi is closely watching a looming US Supreme Court ruling that will decide the legality of Trump’s 2025 tariff actions. If those tariffs are struck down, the 50 percent duty wall on Indian goods would automatically fall, dramatically strengthening India’s hand.
Political context matters here. The Economic Times commentary on 2025 calls this year close to an “annus horribilis” for India–US ties: political goodwill is low, and the economic relationship is “reeling under 50% tariffs.” Yet trade flows and negotiations continue, and Indian policymakers appear to be betting that time, law, and their own export performance will eventually force a tariff reset.
For now, listeners should watch three key fronts: the 50 percent US tariff rate on Indian goods, the Supreme Court’s early-2026 ruling on Trump’s tariff authority, and the pace of the proposed India–US deal that could unwind at least part of this tariff shock.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an update on India’s evolving tariff landscape. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/
Avoid ths tariff fee's and check out these deals https://amzn.to/4iaM94Q
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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