India shifts to damage control after Trump ramps up threats

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

Mr Modi’s rivals have criticised his previously friendly relationship with Mr Trump.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s rivals have criticised his previously friendly relationship with US President Donald Trump.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:

NEW DELHI – India’s government is scrambling to contain the economic fallout from President Donald Trump’s threatened tariff action, which has left officials in New Delhi reeling on how to respond.

Mr Trump’s latest tirade caught officials in India’s capital off guard. The President’s language – calling India’s economy “dead”, its tariff barriers “obnoxious” and its people indifferent to the plight of Ukrainians – has been akin to a verbal slap in the face, an official in New Delhi said, asking not to be identified as the discussions are private.

Officials have no template to deal with these kinds of public assaults, the person said, adding that the latest turn of events has put a strain on India’s relationship with the US.

Mr Trump said on Aug 5 he will

increase the 25 per cent tariff

on Indian exports to the US “substantially over the next 24 hours”, citing the Asian nation’s high barriers to trade and its purchases of Russian oil.

India was “fuelling the war machine, and if they’re going to do that, I’m not going to be happy”, Mr Trump told CNBC. 

India’s government is now bracing for higher tariffs and seeking to limit the possible economic damage.

The Ministry of Commerce and Industry is discussing ways to help exporters that would be the hardest hit, such as in the gems and jewellery and textile sectors.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been urging Indians to buy more local goods to offset any slump in global demand, and officials say they will continue to seek back-channel talks to help ease the tensions.

India has been a target of Mr Trump for weeks now because of its Russian ties.

Mr Trump’s aides say energy purchases by countries like India and China are helping to keep Russia’s economy afloat as its leader, President Vladimir Putin, wages war with Ukraine. The US President has given Mr Putin

until Aug 8 to reach a truce

in the conflict.

Mr Modi’s government is so far holding its ground, saying it is being unreasonably targeted by the US for its ties to Russia – its biggest supplier of oil and military equipment. Officials have signalled they would not instruct refiners to halt Russian crude purchases.

For months, Indian trade officials had been negotiating with the Trump administration on a deal that both sides said was close to being finalised, with a tariff rate possibly below 20 per cent.

The US President’s tone appeared to change in July, when he threatened India with higher duties alongside others in the Brics bloc of nations for what he said was the group’s anti-US stance.

He then followed up several days later with warnings about financial penalties on countries like India for buying oil from Russia. 

India has been buying Russian crude at a rate of about 1.7 million barrels a day so far in 2025, all of it from seaborne imports, while China has purchased an average of about two million barrels, comprising both seaborne imports and oil transported via an inland pipeline.

To offset the tariff hikes, officials in New Delhi are now considering expediting an export promotion plan, first outlined in the February budget, which set aside 22.5 billion rupees (S$330 million) to support exporters.

The budgeted amount may be increased to help businesses offset potential losses resulting from greater competition with regional rivals, which have secured lower tariff rates of around 15 per cent to 20 per cent, a person familiar with the matter said. 

The discussions are still ongoing and the government has not made any decision on what kind of support it will provide, the person said.

India’s Ministry of Commerce and Industry and Ministry of Finance did not immediately respond to e-mails seeking further information.

New Delhi is also weighing easing some dairy market access rules for the US to placate Mr Trump, officials familiar with the matter said.

The government is discussing whether it can allow limited imports of some dairy products, such as cheese not made in India and condensed milk with clear labelling of the animal feed used in manufacturing, they said. 

India maintains tariffs of as high as 60 per cent on dairy products to protect its local industry and enforces strict rules to ensure imported dairy goods are not from cattle fed with animal-based products in order to adhere to religious sensitivities.

Any easing of restrictions in the dairy sector would represent a significant concession by India, which did not grant the UK any similar market access in a recently concluded free trade agreement.

Economists estimate that a 25 per cent tariff could cut India’s gross domestic product growth by 0.3 percentage point.

Ms Pranjul Bhandari, chief India economist at HSBC, said an additional penalty would curb growth further, resulting in lower capital inflows and investment.

An internal assessment by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry shows that a 25 per cent tariff would impact about 10 per cent of India’s exports in the period from July to September.

Mr Modi’s rivals have criticised his previously friendly relationship with Mr Trump and

called him out for his silence

on the US leader’s comments.

“We are receiving threats – that there will be more than 25 per cent tariffs and we are being told that we should not buy oil from Russia. This friendship has turned out to be expensive,” Mr Jairam Ramesh, a senior leader in the main opposition Indian National Congress, told reporters on Aug 5.

Mr Trump’s actions will push India to react, although it is unlikely to retaliate and will more likely seek further talks with the US, said Ms Indrani Bagchi, chief executive officer at Ananta Centre, a Delhi-based research group.

“My sense is the government will contain this and will not take this forward, will not escalate,” she said.

India will want to continue the trade deal negotiations in spite of Mr Trump’s “personal anger”, she noted. 

The US President likely wants to have Mr Modi call him and “fold in the way that other countries have”, she said. “That is not India’s style.” BLOOMBERG

See more on