India, labelled as ‘tariff king’ by US
President-elect Donald Trump, is “bracing itself” for possible tariff actions
against its exports once he assumes office next month. It is working on an
informal strategy, based on anticipation of Trump’s actions and demands, and is
identifying items where some duty cuts could be possible without hurting
economic interests, sources have said.
“Some discussions
and interactions have started within the government on how to handle Trump 2.0.
Efforts are on to anticipate his actions and demands… if he does this, what we
will do or if he asks for this, how will we respond. Work has already started
on that,” a person tracking the matter told businessline.
The analysis and anticipation are being based on
how the earlier Trump government, 2017-21, worked and behaved with India and
what he said during the Presidential campaign earlier this year on tariffs,
particularly in reference to India, the source said.
“The Commerce
Ministry is studying both Trump’s past actions and campaign threats and trying
to see what decision he can take once he forms the government. He is a highly
unpredictable guy. But we are still trying to brace ourselves for the storm,”
the source said. “There are some items
where tariffs have just been imposed for the purpose of earning revenue and are
not serving any other purpose. Those could be identified for possible tariff
cuts,” the source added.
During his
election campaign in Michigan in September, Trump called India a “big abuser”
of trade relations between the two countries while the following month, at his
campaign rally in Detroit, he said that India was the biggest tariff charger.
He warned of reciprocal tariffs of 10 per cent on all countries and 60 per cent
on China. The US was India’s largest
trading partner with exports worth $77.51 billion and imports worth $42.19
billion in FY24.
During his first stint as the US President,
Trump had imposed penal duties on Indian steel and aluminium, following which
India imposed retaliatory tariffs on a number of prominent US exports to India
such as apples, almonds, chickpeas, lentils and walnuts. Later, India reached an understanding with the Biden government on the
matter and the dispute was resolved.