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India free trade deal at a glance

Michael Race & Jennifer Meierhans

Business reporters

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The *** and India have agreed a trade deal to make it cheaper and easier to buy and sell goods and services to one another.

The hope is that the deal will benefit the economies of both countries.

The British government said the deal was the “biggest and most economically significant” trade agreement the *** had signed since leaving the European Union in 2020.

Here’s a quick guide to what’s been agreed and what it could mean for you.

What has been agreed?

The *** has lowered taxes on goods imported from India including:

clothing and footwearfood products including frozen prawnsjewellery and gems

India has cut taxes on goods imported from the *** including:

cosmeticsscotch whisky, **** and soft drinkscarsfood including lamb, salmon, chocolate and biscuitsmedical devicesaerospaceelectrical machinery

The deal will also allow British firms to compete for more services contracts in India.

What will be the impact on people in the *** and India?

The trade deal won’t come into force for up to a year, so don’t expect to notice any immediate changes.

Over time though, the *** government says lowering tariffs on the likes of clothing, jewellery, and frozen prawns “could” lead to cheaper prices and more choice.

This deal could also be a big win for *** businesses which manufacture the goods which have seen tariffs slashed, such as car makers and whisky distillers.

For example, tariffs on whisky and **** being imported to India from the *** will be halved from 150% to 75% before reducing to 40% by the 10th year of the deal. Car tariffs will fall from more than 100% to 10%.

That will provide a boost to those two industries, which look set to be hit hard by US tariffs, as it will mean Indian companies wanting to import those products will pay less import charges than before.

If businesses end up exporting more goods to India and make higher profits, this could lead to them spending more on hiring staff, investing and also paying more tax.

In India, consumers could see much more choice among the goods which have been included under the deal. Clothing manufacturing businesses and jewellers will also be able to access the *** market which will boost their margins.

How important is this for the *** and India?

This deal has been a long time in the making, with on-off negotiations going on for some three years.

However it appears US President Donald Trump’s introduction of tariffs on goods entering America has prompted other world leaders to consider striking free-trade deals with one another.

The ***’s deal with India is its third biggest after its agreements with Australia and Japan. For context, the *** has signed trade deals and agreements in principle with about 70 countries and one with the EU.

The EU is the biggest trade partner for both the *** and India. Therefore, a free trade agreement between India and the EU would be more significant than the one with the ***. Both India and the EU have said they

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Last year trade between the *** and India totalled £41bn. The *** government has said this deal would boost that trade by an additional £25.5bn a year by 2040.

It is said over time it will boost the *** economy by £4.8bn. This is a tiny proportion of the *** economy which was worth £2,851bn last year.

However, India is also forecast to become the world’s third-largest economy in a few years. It is also home to 1.45bn people – about 20 times the population of the *** -which is a lot of potential customers.

The *** is also a high priority trading partner for India, which has an ambitious target to grow exports by $1 trillion by 2030.

What does this mean for visas?

One of the reasons the *** India free trade deal has taken so long to reach is that India had made big demands about visas for Indian professionals and students to work and study abroad.

The British government said this deal does not include any change in immigration policy, including towards Indian students studying in the ***.

But it does includes a three-year exemption on the social security paid by Indian employees working in the ***, on short-term visas.

This agreement, known as the Double Contribution Convention, designed to ensure social security contributions are not made in more than one country, was one of the elements India had pushed for during negotiations.

The ***’s Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said the deal would make it easier for people with certain skills to work in the *** temporarily.

“It opens up a small number of visas from an existing route for chefs and musicians and yoga teachers, very, very small, about 1,800.”



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#India #free #trade #deal #glance

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