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US tariff actions since 2018, and exemptions on over 200 food and agricultural products in 2025, nudged India to diversify exports beyond bulk staples into higher-value horticulture, spices, nuts, and processed foods. Rollbacks opened market space, while prior tariff shocks reshaped strategies, supply chains, and pricing expectations for Indian agribusiness.
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US tariff waves—from the 2018 steel and aluminium duties to newer actions in 2025—created ripple effects beyond metals, influencing India’s farm export mix and market calculus. With agriculture contributing around a tenth of merchandise exports, policy shocks from the world’s largest consumer market pushed Indian agribusiness to hedge risk through product and destination diversification.
The 2025 US move to exempt over 200 agricultural products, including coffee, tea, tropical fruits, nuts, juices, and cocoa, reduced effective tariff rates and opened a window for India to expand supply in categories where it holds competitive potential. Analysts noted modest US inflation impact but significant trade reconfiguration opportunities for emerging markets, including India.
India’s exporters responded by leaning into higher-value segments—spices, tea, coffee, cashew, fruit preparations—while building resilience in logistics and compliance to meet US buyer expectations. Explanatory coverage underscored how exemptions levelled the playing field and revived demand in select niches, even as large categories still face complex barriers.
Key Highlights
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US tariff shocks since 2018 reshaped export strategies, spurring diversification into value-added agri products and broader market targeting.
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Exemptions on 200+ products in 2025 included tea, coffee, nuts, tropical fruits, juices, and cocoa, improving access for Indian suppliers.
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Oxford Economics estimated the US effective tariff rate fell by 0.6 percentage points to 12.8%, with limited macro inflation impact but notable trade realignment potential.
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Times of India explained immediate benefits for Indian exporters in select categories, with demand pickup and improved market access.
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Outlook Business highlighted relief for spices, tea, coffee, and cashews, while noting persistent high tariffs in some major sectors.
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Hindustan Times framed diversification as a strategic hedge against policy volatility and price shocks from US actions.
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Indian agribusiness accelerated compliance, branding, and logistics to capture US shelf-space in premium niches.
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Policy recalibration and private investment aligned to strengthen value chains and quality standards for exports.
India’s agricultural diversification reflects a pragmatic response to external tariff volatility—pivoting toward premium, resilient categories while upgrading supply-chain sophistication. With tariff rollbacks creating immediate openings and past shocks instilling discipline, Indian exporters are positioned to grow share in US-bound value-added agri trade.
Sources: Hindustan Times; The Hindu BusinessLine; Outlook Business; Times of India.
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