Factbox-What’s in the UK-India trade deal?

0
- ADVERTISEMENT -
Share
FILE PHOTO: Britain’s Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer attends a bilateral meeting with India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the sidelines of the G20 summit at the Museum of Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Picture date: Monday November 18, 2024. Stefan Rousseau/Pool via REUTERS/File photo

LONDON (Reuters) -Britain and India clinched a long-coveted free trade pact on Tuesday after tariff turmoil sparked by U.S. President Donald Trump forced the two sides to hasten efforts to increase their trade in whisky, cars and food.

Below are some of the main points from the agreement:

KEY FIGURES

- ADVERTISEMENT -

The agreement between India and Britain is expected to boost bilateral trade between the world’s fifth and sixth-largest economies by 25.5 billion pounds ($34.13 billion) a year from 2040, Britain said.

Trade between the two nations totalled 42.6 billion pounds in 2024. India was Britain’s 11th largest trading partner.

Britain said the deal was the “biggest and most economically significant” bilateral trade agreement it had signed since leaving the European Union in 2020.

TARIFF CUTS FOR UK EXPORTERS

India, which has some of the world’s highest tariffs on imports, will slash levies on 90% of British products sold in the country, from whisky and medical devices to machinery and lamb, with 85% of those becoming tariff-free within a decade.

Whisky and gin tariffs will be halved from 150% to 75%, before falling to 40% by the tenth year of the deal, benefiting Britain’s Scotch whisky industry and making the beverage cheaper in the world’s largest whisky market.

India will also cut automotive tariffs to 10% from over 100% currently.

Other British goods which will face lower tariffs include cosmetics, aerospace, lamb, medical devices, salmon, electrical machinery, soft drinks, chocolate and biscuits.

Based on 2022 data, India’s tariff cuts will amount to over 400 million pounds, which are expected to more than double after 10 years.

TARIFFS CUTS FOR INDIAN EXPORTERS

Britain has also agreed to reduce its own tariffs on some products, which were relatively lower than India’s, leaving 99% of Indian exports to Britain facing zero duties.

Britain will remove a tariff on textile imports from India, benefiting India’s large apparel industry, which employs millions of workers.

The deal will open up export opportunities for Indian sectors such as marine products, leather, sports goods, toys, gems and jewellery, engineering goods and auto parts, India said.

SOCIAL SECURITY

The deal also contains a so-called double contribution convention, which will exempt temporary Indian workers in Britain and their employers from making social security contributions in Britain for three years.

The social security deal – hailed by India as a “huge win” – was one of three deals which were being negotiated in addition to agreements on trade and investment.