India to Take ‘Measured, Calibrated’ Response to Trump’s Tariff Move: Official
India’s auto components, chemicals, shrimp, and steel sectors are severely impacted by the reciprocal tariffs levied by the US, a government official familiar with the matter said, adding that the pharmaceutical sector appears to have been spared.
Trump’s Tariff Move: India’s auto components, chemicals, shrimp, and steel sectors are severely impacted by the reciprocal tariffs levied by the US, a government official familiar with the matter said, adding that the pharmaceutical sector appears to have been spared.
“India’s reaction to this development will be measured, calibrated and professional unlike some countries that threaten American imports,” a second government official said. Both officials asked not to be named. Hindustan Times reported on Thursday that India would not impose retaliatory tariffs on US imports.
Both officials, however, sought to look at the positives, insisting that India could gain a competitive edge over key competitors in the United States, including China, Bangladesh, and Vietnam, in labour-intensive sectors. Still, top commerce ministry officials and experts are currently at the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) assessing the impact ahead of an official statement they added.
Also Read: Myanmar Earthquake: Military Regime Declares Ceasefire for Rehabilitation Efforts
“With 27% effective reciprocal tariff imposed on India, practically, India has over 54-79% advantage China. Similarly, we have significant advantage over Vietnam and Bangladesh for textiles exports. These are some extremely positive factors of the Trump’s tariff move,” one of them said. While the US announcement lists 26% as the tariff levied on India, other documents, including those received by the ministry show that the rate is actually 27%.
However, compared to their Asian and South Asian rivals, a number of labour-intensive industries will generally benefit, the two individuals continued.
At 11:07 a.m., the BSE Sensex, one of India's major stock indices, had recovered some of its losses and was trading at 200.6 p.m. However, compared to Wednesday's close of 76,617.44, this represented a 0.26% decline.
It appears that the reciprocal tariffs were determined by dividing the value of products imported from a country by the US trade deficit with that nation. If the percentage is higher than 10%, a reciprocal tariff has been applied, which is half of that amount.
Also Read: Amit Shah Slams Opposition Over Waqf Bill: ‘Fear-Mongering for Vote Bank Politics’
A closer reading of USTR documents reveals that the aim was to arrive at the “reciprocal tariff that results in a bilateral trade balance of zero”. But this requires assumptions on elasticity of imports and the price-pass-through of tariffs; the USTR has assumed - as the import elasticity and 0.25 as the price pass-through.
India’s hopes of mitigating these tariffs now depends on a trade deal.
“When two leaders (Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Donald Trump) have agreed to sign a BTA by the fall of 2025, aiming to take bilateral trade from $200 billion to $500 billion in five years, when a BTA framework is already on a fast-track mechanism and when bilateral engagements are well entrenched, any immediate reaction is unwarranted,” HT reported on Thursday quoting an unnamed government official.
“With 27% effective reciprocal tariff imposed on India, practically, India has over 54-79% advantage China. Similarly, we have a significant advantage over Vietnam and Bangladesh for textiles exports. These are some extremely positive factors of the Trump’s tariff move,” one of them said. While the US announcement lists 26% as the tariff levied on India, other documents, including those received by the ministry show that the rate is actually 27%.
Also Read: Amit Shah Cites Lalu Prasad’s 2013 Speech on Waqf Bill: ‘PM Modi Fulfilling His Wishes’
For breaking news and live news updates, like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter and Instagram. Read more on Latest World News on The National Bulletin