Much of the analysis of the Indo-US trade deal centres on what India has gained or lost in terms of trade. But the point about the deal is not that it improves our export prospects while opening up selectively to American goods.
It is that the deal improves the prospects for capital inflows, FDI and FII. These inflows have been distinctly unsatisfactory consequent to the US's imposing additional tariff of 50 per cent on Indian exports (barring a few specified items).
Foreign investors do not view favourably any emerging market towards which the US administration is ill disposed. That would have meant a downward pressure on the rupee indefinitely. Any further fall in the rupee had the potential to destabilise the Indian growth story. The rupee exchange rate rising to around Rs 90 from Rs 92 or so before the deal was announced is an indicator of how the attitude of the US towards India matters.
More in my BS article, Indo- US trade deal is not just about trade
Indo-US trade deal is not just about trade
The deal
shifts the US posture towards India from hostile to neutral, and that matters
for growth
T T Ram
Mohan
The India-US trade deal, for which a
framework for an interim agreement has been agreed, will not lack critics. The
Congress party has called it a surrender. A farmers’ organisation has called
for protests. Many will pore over the fine print once the details are finalised
and argue that the deal is more favourable to the United States.
We need to be clear about a couple of
things.
First, any nation negotiating a trade
deal with the Trump administration must expect the deal to be tipped in favour
of the US. President Donald Trump has made it clear that his priority is to
reset America’s economic equations with the rest of the world. He is determined
to use the economic and military might of the US to do so.
For the entire post-War period until
recently, the US was happy to let the advantage lie with many of its trade
partners. It believed that it was economically strong enough to do so. Sharing
prosperity with partners, the US believed, would make for world peace and it
would also keep the world safe from communism.
Not any more. Mr Trump rode to power in
2016 by insisting that the time had come to reorder trade relationships to the
benefit of the US. He didn’t quite manage to do so, partly because his
initiatives were scuttled by Washington establishment status quoists in his Cabinet.
In his second term, Mr Trump is determined not to make that mistake. He
has filled his administration with loyalists who will faithfully execute his
orders.
Last July, Mr Trump reiterated his
perception of where matters stand. He said in a post, “The United States of
America has been ripped off on TRADE (and MILITARY!), by friend and foe, alike,
for DECADES. It has come at a cost of TRILLIONS OF DOLLARS, and it is just not
sustainable any longer - And never was!” In any trade deal, therefore, it will
be Advantage US.
Second, we must be clear that the
overall relationship with the US is contingent on arriving at a trade deal that
America approves. Not doing a trade deal means courting US hostility across the
board. In negotiating a trade deal with the US, every nation faces a choice: Does
it want the US to be a friend or a foe?
Mr Trump’s trade deal with the European
Union is an excellent illustration of the two points made above. For the EU,
the issue was not just access to the vast American market. It was also American
support to Europe in the Ukraine conflict, including the supply of critical
weaponry and intelligence and America’s involvement in the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization (Nato) itself. Faced with the prospect of jeopardising its
defence relationship with the US, the EU settled for terms that were widely
seen as humiliating.
The EU now faces a baseline 15 per cent
tariff on its exports to the US. In addition, steel, aluminium and copper
exports from the EU will face a 50 per cent tariff. Car exports would be
subject to a quota. The EU has also agreed to buy an additional $750
billion in US energy products over the next three years and make investments
worth $600 billion in the US by 2029. The EU, for its part, will eliminate
tariffs on imports of all US industrial goods and provide preferential access
to a wide range of US seafood and agricultural products. A more abject
surrender is hard to visualise. Mr Trump has likewise signed deals with the UK,
Japan and South Korea — all close allies of the US —that are conspicuously
one-sided.
The lesson for India is that the
Indo-US trade deal is not just about access to the US market. India has
weathered Mr Trump’s 50 per cent tariff on Indian exports much better than
expected. India’s total exports are up 4.4 per cent year on year despite Trump’s
tariffs. Nor have exports to the US suffered — they are up 9.8 per cent in
April-December 2025.
The problem for India is that capital
flows are flagging. This is happening at a time when India’s current account
deficit of 1.3 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) compares favourably
with that of a range of countries, including Canada, the United Kingdom and
Australia, as the latest Economic Survey notes. India had no difficulty
financing current account deficits of a much higher magnitude in the post-reform
era. Today, we are hard-pressed for capital inflows, and the rupee is under
pressure despite a highly favourable set of economic indicators. That is not
something to be treated lightly.
Gross foreign direct investment (FDI)
fell marginally by 2 per cent in calendar year 2024. This may be in line with
the general decline in FDI flows in recent years but it does not help us at
all. At the same time, outward FDI from India as well as repatriation of profits
by foreign firms in India have increased sharply. As a result, net FDI in
April-November 2025 was a mere $5.6 billion. The bigger problem at the moment
is with foreign portfolio inflows (FPI). It was (-)$3.9 billion in
April-December 2026.
There could be many reasons why FPI
inflows have turned negative. You can be pretty sure, however, that the
orientation of the US administration towards India is an important factor. When
India is subject to a punitive tariff regime by the US, fund managers are
unlikely to view India as a good place to invest in. The Treasury department
houses individuals, including the Treasury Secretary, with strong links to Wall
Street. They are known to work the phone lines with fund managers on a range of
matters.
Absent a trade deal, therefore, we must reckon with rough weather in respect
of capital flows, however good our macroeconomic indicators. (Using the future
tense, as in the original version, because the deal is not finalised yet- TTR .
And who knows, services exports to the US will not be subject to punitive action as well? Also at risk are defence collaboration, technology transfers
and the entire strategic partnership that has been built over the past two
decades. Thus, India’s strong economic performance in the present year is no assurance that it can be sustained in the
absence of an Indo-US trade deal.
The point about the Indo-US trade deal
is not that it involves compromises, such as cutting back on oil imports from
Russia or scaling up imports of goods from the US to $100 billion annually for
the next five years. It is also not just about getting a tariff rate of 18 per
cent, one that is lower than that of many of our competitors. The substantive
point is that it moves the US posture towards India from hostile to neutral.
That is good news for the Indian economy.