The recent announcement of the president of the United States, Donald Trump, to implement a reciprocal rate of 26 percent on Indian goods has caused comprehensive concern in several sectors, including agriculture. (However, he has now stopped in the leg for 90 days). For India, the implications of such movement are not in black and white: they fall into a gray zone of mixed results. Some segments feel heat, while others find an unexpected opening.
The impact of these rates on Indian agriculture can be seen from two angles: market pressure and opportunities. These rates have indirectly increased the cost of imported machinery and agrochemical inputs, adding pressure to production costs for Indian farmers and agricultures. Sectors such as ESOFOOD and Gherkins have expressed concern about the reduction of competitiveness in the US market.
However, products such as rice and anacardos have been won due to relatively lower tariff rates in India compared to those of its regional competitors. For example, a 26 percent rate is imposed on Indian goods, much higher rates are applied to other Asian countries, including China and Vietnam. This relative position accumulates the competitiveness of Indian agricultural exports and open pathways in the US. Despite the fees.
In addition to the short -term trade balance, the current situation underlines the need for diversification for the sake of resilience by Indian agriculture. Past commercial tensions have allowed Indian exporters to find a path to Southeast Asia and the Middle East. The two regions acted as a second best constant alternative and, therefore, softened the blow of US actions for India.
This indicates the growing need for self -sufficiency and market resilience. Given the current protectionist scenario, India needs to invest more in strengthening its agricultural value chain, both internally and externally. Enable national capacities, optimize export behavior and formulate political resources policies are key to maintaining this adaptive sector against external shocks.
Minimization impact: Strategy to safeguard the Indian agricultural sector
As India faces the effects of new US tariffs, it is not only a test but also an opportunity to restore our strategy. The trip ahead will need more than improvised solutions. It demands strategic thinking, the wisest commercial options and a long -term strength mentality. The following are some of the important steps that the agro sector of India can ensure and transform the pressure into progress.
The first step must be to expand and diversify our export markets. A large dependence on a single commercial partner makes any industry susceptible to imbalances. Agri Indian exporters should continue to deepen their efforts in alternative markets such as Africa, ASEAN and CCG nations.
The second focus area is in agro -products based on value. Instead of working only in raw or primary products, India should focus on innovations on processing and packaging. This guarantees a better export price, more as an insurance policy against generalized accidents of basic products and import tariffs.
Third, the Government could grant exemptions and concessions of GST GST on duties on elements of agricultural inputs such as agrochemicals and machinery, which would help reduce the country’s cost pressures and improve the competitive spirit of Indian products in International. The development of infrastructure is also crucial. Improved cold chains, storage and logistics efficiency minimize waste and delivery time, two crucial factors for the trust of any global buyer.
Another important or careless strategy is to help MSME in Agri exports. India needs to build a new generation of fast, innovative and connected entrepreneurs worldwide in agricultural export by facilitating access to credit, reducing the burden of export compliance and providing the support of commercial facilitation councils.
As mentioned, commercial policies such as Trump rates can create interruptions, but at the same time, they provide the opportunity to reassess and improve our systems. Indian agriculture must be directed not only to persistence but also to global relevance. We must make investments in quality, compliance and competitiveness and convert intermittent commercial interruptions into long -term strategic gains.
The road to which it demands a productive capacity and a firm approach to protect the backbone of our economy: our farmers. While commercial alliances are necessary, they should not be at the expense of the independence of politics or self -sufficiency. Rather, India needs to take advantage of this period to build its agricultural value chain, update production and become a competitive world supplier. The approach must be patience, leverage and a clear purpose with confidence, but not lose focus on the farmer in the middle.
The author is president, Dhanuka Agritech Limited
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Posted on April 12, 2025