City
Epaper

India's GDP will go below 6.2% in FY26, if 25% US tariff continues post September: S&P Report

By ANI | Updated: August 1, 2025 15:09 IST

New Delhi [India], August 1 : India's not giving market access to the United States in the agriculture and ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India], August 1 : India's not giving market access to the United States in the agriculture and Dairy products sectors is likely to be the reason for not reaching on a trade agreement, noted S&P Market Intelligence report released on Friday.

The report further says, if 25 per cent tariff imposed by U.S. will remain in place beyond September 2025, India's GDP will be adjusted downwards. S&P Market Intelligence has projected India's GDP for FY 2025-26 at 6.2 per cent in July, down from a GDP growth of 6.5 per cent in FY 2024-25.

"This projection is likely to be adjusted downward if the 25 per cent tariff is implemented. Its application would leave India relatively disadvantaged versus regional competitors that have secured a lower tariff rate."

The report noted that India is never going to offer market access for the U.S. in the agriculture and dairy products sectors as it will directly impact the farmers who represent a crucial electoral group in the country.

"The Indian government would be highly reluctant to offer market access for the US in the agriculture and dairy products sectors, making it difficult for India to reduce its tariffs on US exports of soy, corn, wheat and rice as farmers represent a crucial electoral group in the country." noted S&P.

Other contentious areas include exposure to section 232 which includes 'national security'. Tariffs on exports of electronics and pharmaceuticals to U.S, which accounted for 12.3 per cent and 17.8 per cent of India's export to U.S. (as per export data of 2024). U.S. has given exemption or reduced rates on both of these sectors for EU deal, it will put Indian manufacturers at a competitive disadvantage unless a similar deal is negotiated with U.S.

The report further adds that import of Russian oil and defence equipment with Russia may be another issue delaying the trade agreement.

"While India would be willing to increase imports of US crude oil, the government would be unwilling to pursue this policy change specifically due to US demands. India would be instead keener to import LNG from the US, given its growing domestic demand and expanded US supply capacity, to balance India-US trade (with a US$45.7 billion surplus recorded for India in 2024)." stated S&P.

Trump has threatened a penalty on India, if it continues to import from Russia however, specifics have not been announced as of now.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsShrimant wins gold at Norway Para-Armwrestling Cup 2026, dedicates medal to martyrs

InternationalTaiwan calls for "democratic shield" to deter China's military pressure in First Island Chain

NationalBJP's Harsh Vardhan Shringla supports PM Modi's 'guarantee' to stop illegal infiltration in Bengal

Politics"Party of corruption and commissions": Piyush Goyal slams DMK govt ahead of polls

PoliticsGorkha Janmukti Morcha chief calls for unity, urges support for BJP and allies in West Bengal polls 2026

Business Realted Stories

BusinessFuel supplies remain stable as all refineries operate at high capacity: Govt

Business"No increase in interest rates, 125 bps repo cut benefit passed to customers": PNB CEO

BusinessPakistan inflation hits 74-week high at 12.15 pc: Report

BusinessRs 1.53 lakh crore booster shot fast-tracks growth in Indian Railways

BusinessPMLA tribunal confirms ED's provisional attachments against RCOM and subsidiaries