PM Narendra Modi (L) with US President Donald Trump in the White House | X (@narendramodi)

New Delhi: With just 11 days left for US President Donald Trump’s tit-for-tat tariffs to kick in, India on Friday said its negotiations with Washington are underway to build a framework for a bilateral trade pact that would address issues relating to levies and market access.

India remains engaged with the US administration at “various levels” to arrive at a mutually-beneficial trade agreement, Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said at his weekly media briefing.

Jaiswal, however, did not directly respond to queries on whether India is expecting some kind of a waiver from Trump’s reciprocal tariff that comes into effect on April 2.

The US president indicated on Wednesday that Washington will not spare India from the new tariff regime, saying he has a “very good” relationship with New Delhi and has a “problem” with its tariff structure.

“India and the US are in the process of taking bilateral trade negotiations forward,” Jaiswal said.

“The two governments are actively working to build a framework for the BTA, which would aim to expand trade, enhance market access, reduce tariff and non-tariff barriers and deepen supply-chain integration,” he said.

“In this endeavour, our minister of commerce and industry visited the US from March 3 to 7 and held discussions with the US secretary of commerce and US trade representative,” he added.

The US president’s tariff tussle has stoked fears of a global trade war, with many countries already announcing counter-measures to deal with it.

Following talks between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Trump in Washington DC last month, the two sides announced that the first tranche of the BTA would be negotiated by the fall of 2025.

“The government of India remains engaged with the US administration at various levels to arrive at a mutually-beneficial, multi-sector bilateral trade agreement,” Jaiswal said.

“Both sides are in conversation and hopefully, will come to some sort of an understanding,” he added.

When pressed further on whether India is expecting some concession from the reciprocal tariff, Jaiswal did not give any specific response.

“You will have to wait for the talks to come to a closure,” he said.

In line with his “America First” policy, Trump earlier this month announced reciprocal tariffs on its partners and other nations that impose higher levies on imports from the US.

India has reduced its average applied tariffs significantly for key developed countries like Australia, the United Arab Emirates, Switzerland and Norway under recently-concluded bilateral trade agreements.

Similar negotiations are currently underway with the European Union and the United Kingdom, among other partners.

The ongoing discussions with the United States should be seen in this context, Indian government sources said a few weeks ago.

In the Union budget for 2025-26, India announced its decision to lower tariffs on the Bourbon whiskey, wine and electronic vehicle (EV) segments.

The decisions were seen as an attempt to send a signal to the Trump administration that New Delhi is open to bringing down tariffs in specific sectors.

Washington is also pushing New Delhi to buy more American oil, gas and military platforms to bring down the trade deficit that stands at around USD 45 billion in India’s favour.

The US was India’s largest trading partner, with the overall bilateral trade in goods and services amounting to USD 190 billion for the calendar year 2023.

In the financial year 2023-24, the US was the third-largest source of foreign direct investment (FDI) into India with inflows of USD 4.99 billion.

(Except for the headline, this article has not been edited by FPJ’s editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)


Rahul Dev

Cricket Jounralist at Newsdesk

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