City
Epaper

Why Indian pharma sector is exempt from Trump's tariffs

By IANS | Updated: August 28, 2025 13:30 IST

New Delhi, Aug 28 India's role as the world's leading generic drug manufacturer may explain why the pharmaceutical ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Aug 28 India's role as the world's leading generic drug manufacturer may explain why the pharmaceutical industry has been excluded from the US's tariffs, according to experts.

US President Donald Trump has implemented an additional 25 per cent tariff on India, effective from Wednesday, bringing the overall tariff to 50 per cent. However, India’s pharma exports to the US (accounting for 35 per cent of India’s total pharma exports) have been excluded from the tariffs. The sector is currently under review as part of the Section 232 investigation.

Indian Pharmaceutical Alliance secretary general Sudarshan Jain stated that generic medication -- key for providing affordable healthcare in the US -- is the major reason for the exclusion.

India provides the most affordable medicines and is the largest producer globally. The pharmaceutical sector in the country supplies nearly 80 per cent of the world’s generic medicines.

According to a recent report by India Ratings and Research (Ind-Ra), the low-cost and high-value proposition of Indian generic exports offers significant cost advantages to the US healthcare industry.

It further noted that the proportion of the US’ contribution to pharma revenue has been steadily declining over the past few years. This is due to price erosion and its impact on margins and returns, the report said.

“Most Indian pharma players have a generic business in the US market, earning thin operating profitability. However, Indian companies have a diversified revenue model and a healthy balance sheet. There is no major risk to liquidity in the sector (large cash balances-10 per cent-11 per cent of revenues),” said Vivek Jain, Director, Corporates, India Ratings & Research.

"Furthermore, most companies have sufficient headroom under debt covenants and diversified funding sources. Hence, any material impact from future tariffs on Indian pharma is highly unlikely," he added.

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

InternationalIndia, Saudi Arabia strengthen defence ties with 7th JCDC meeting

NationalGujarat CM condemns remarks on PM Modi’s late mother, calls it 'insult to Indian culture'

Hockey"Wearing the national colours is always special": Manpreet Singh on 400-match milestone

Other SportsDiamond League Final 2025 LIVE Streaming: When and Where To Watch Neeraj Chopra In Action

EntertainmentVivek Agnihotri praises Anupam Kher's Gandhi role in 'The Bengal Files', calls him "finest in cinema"

Business Realted Stories

BusinessAndhra: Investment Promotion Board approves Rs 53,922 crore investment projects

BusinessCCI, Ministry of Electronics & IT take stock of challenges in data protection

BusinessDream Sports-owned FanCode to shut sports merchandise business by October

Business'Digital transformation may boost Indian mining and metals competitiveness by 15 per cent'

BusinessMadras HC orders circulation of state govt order of 24x7 business operations to all police stations