Anchal Vohra is a Brussels-based international affairs commentator.
On a smog-filled day in New Delhi, I watched as a few German cars struggled to
navigate a massive traffic jam. A British SUV was also in the mix, trailing not
so far behind.
Last year, these foreign cars accounted for only 0.1 percent of India’s imports,
with Germans in the lead and the British coming in a near second. However,
British businesses have gained an edge ever since the U.K. and India inked a
free trade agreement earlier this year, with India finally lowering its
protectionist guard.
Once this deal fully comes into effect, overall bilateral business is expected
to grow by more than 50 percent in about a decade-and-a-half, as New Delhi
slashes its car tariffs from 100 percent to 10 percent, and its tariffs on
scotch from 150 percent to 40 percent over a period of 10 years — all despite
the cost to its domestic industries.
It also gains particular advantage for its textile sector, which was hard hit by
U.S. President Donald Trump’s 50-percent tariff, removing tariffs on Indian
textiles exported to the U.K.
The EU, meanwhile, remains the single largest market in the world, with a much
higher chance of growing its exports to a country packed with over 1.46 billion
consumers. Yet, negotiations between New Delhi and Brussels are forever hitting
roadblocks, even as negotiators shuttle between the two capitals to get a deal
across the finish line — a deadline that’s now been postponed to Jan. 26.
And as these talks continue, the bloc could stand to learn from the flexibility
of its former member.
According to an Indian official in New Delhi, granted anonymity in order to
speak freely, the biggest barriers to an agreement are currently the EU’s
insistence on greater market access in the politically sensitive agriculture
sector, and its insistence on a carbon tax under the Carbon Border Adjustment
Mechanism (CBAM).
On top of all this, the bloc’s protectionist tendencies — displayed by its
higher tariffs on steel and its recent decision to curb rice imports from India
— are also unexpected hurdles.
In contrast to this rigidity, India’s concessions in its deal with the U.K.
emerged from the flexibility it was granted in the agriculture sector, which was
largely insulated from British products, the official said. “For all its faults,
[the U.K.] understands India and Indians better.”
Nearly half of Indians depend on agriculture for their livelihood, and farmers
make up a strong voting bloc that holds strong political clout. Back in 2021,
farmer protests even forced Prime Minister Narendra Modi to withdraw
agricultural reforms and apologize.
In fact, I have been told by former Indian officials and experts that the U.S.
tariffs on India weren’t punishment for the country’s purchase of Russian oil,
as Trump has claimed, but rather for its refusal to let U.S. food products flood
the country.
Nearly half of Indians depend on agriculture for their livelihood, and farmers
make up a strong voting bloc that holds strong political clout. | Jagadeesh
Nv/EPA
“The interests of our farmers are top priority. India will never compromise on
the interests of its farmers, dairy farmers and fishermen,” Modi had said at the
time.
But these same differences now threaten the EU-India relationship before it even
properly takes off.
“The Europeans could learn from the British,” the Indian official noted. “They
excluded dairy, chicken and apples from the deal,” he explained, listing
products particularly important to India. “In exchange, we let them bring in
salmon, cod and lamb.” He also alluded that India could consider dropping
tariffs on cars and wine if the bloc kept out of agriculture: “In liquor, luxury
cars and wine, there is always room, since that doesn’t affect our most
vulnerable people.”
Instead of any such changes,, however, India is now growing peeved by what it
sees as last-minute pressure tactics by Brussels.
Just this month, the EU decided to “limit rice imports from India” and other
Asian countries to the benefit of domestic rice growers and millers. And the
bloc’s unexpected decision to spike tariffs on steel imports outside its quota
to up to 50 percent has rattled Indian negotiators.
New Delhi was already opposed to the EU’s incoming carbon tax, believing it
would make its steel exports uncompetitive. The Secretary of India’s Ministry of
Steel Sandeep Poundrik described the European carbon tax as a bigger threat to
Indian exports than Trump’s tariffs.
On top of all this, the bloc’s protectionist tendencies — displayed by its
higher tariffs on steel and its recent decision to curb rice imports from India
— are also unexpected hurdles. | Piyal Adhikary/EPA
Moreover, some experts like former trade negotiator for India Sangeeta Godbole
argue the EU stands to gain more from an FTA whereas India stands to lose if the
carbon tax provision isn’t reconsidered. “Nearly 80 percent of Indian exports to
the EU even now face miniscule tariffs below 1 percent,” she noted recently,
demanding India shield exports “from excessive environmental rules” the EU is
trying to impose.
To that end, the country has decried the bloc’s tax on carbon intensive imports
via CBAM as a violation of the Common But Differentiated Responsibilities (CBDR)
principle, which doesn’t hold developing countries equally responsible for
climate change due to differences in historical contributions and the state of
their economic development.
And here, too, India argues, the understanding with the British could be
emulated. Although it failed to gain an exemption on the U.K.’s version of the
carbon tax, India has reserved the right to retaliate if the FTA’s benefits are
negated by this tax.
For its part, the EU claims the carbon tax is intended to encourage the use of
clean energy in heavy polluting industries. And as Commissioner for Trade Maroš
Šefčovič said back in September: “We also need an understanding from the Indian
side that we also have our constituency, we also have our audience” to consider
— especially after the farmer protests over the recent deal with Mercosur
nations.
Meanwhile, the EU is also concerned about whether a deal with India might end up
benefiting China. The bloc is desperately trying to reduce its dependence on
Beijing in strategically important sectors and hoping India could replace it,
but India itself is heavily reliant on China as well — for example, nearly half
of the components in Indian semiconductors are imported from there.
It also gains particular advantage for its textile sector, which was hard hit by
U.S. President Donald Trump’s 50-percent tariff, removing tariffs on Indian
textiles exported to the U.K. | Divyakant Solanki/EPA
However, speaking with a highly placed EU insider who was granted anonymity, I
learned the bloc is now ready to make concessions, offering to jointly
manufacture cars to encourage India to lower its tariffs, to leave out access to
certain agricultural products, and to possibly even relent on garment duties.
And last week, negotiators went through sector by sector once more, trying to
get a better deal for their domestic industries, trying to keep the balance
sheet even.
The truth is, India — home to a large number of people living below the poverty
line despite its rapid economic growth — needs an FTA with the single largest
market to attract foreign investment.
But the EU needs India too.