Why the
EU President Calls The Imminent FTA with India The Mother Of All Deals
The 27
member EU, supported by its neighbouring countries, mostly in Eastern Europe, who
also want to join it, is a very large and influential economic unit. Croatia
was a recent entrant after many years of adjustments and preparation. The EU is
a $22.52 trillion conglomerate on a nominal basis or $30.18 trillion on a PPP
basis. Great Britain, no longer in the EU after Brexit, has already signed its
own separate FTA with India recently.
The 32
member NATO, also largely European, are intertwined in many ways with the EU. The
EU rivals the United States in heft and size, and as India’s negotiations with
both approach closure, the FTA with the EU is likely to be signed first. It
will no doubt have a knock-on effect on the Indo-US interim trade agreement too.
Agricultural
products have been left out of the draft agreements in both cases because of
Indian red lines. It employs large numbers working in, and dependent on, this
sector, who cannot be allowed to be adversely affected by foreign, often highly
subsidised competition. But for long, this area of possible business was keenly
debated between the negotiating teams and took up much time.
As the old
structures of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and similar bodies including
those associated with the United Nations (UN), fall into disrepute, ineffectiveness
and disuse, these FTAs between countries and groups of countries are gaining
massive importance. India as the leader of BRICS at present and with strong
ties with the G-20/21, the Global South
and the African Union, is pursuing many other bilateral agreements and
cooperation.
The advanced
countries, many hampered by low population and sluggish growth, are also
looking for stimulation for the technological prowess in their economies, and
an alternative to excessive dependence on China. India is an obvious
alternative in principle as demonstrated by US giant Apple, though it will have
to be built up, just as China once was.
The current European
Commission President, German and a woman, Ms Ursula von der Leyen, in the top
job as of 2019, recently called the imminent Free Trade Agreement with India
the ‘mother of all deals’.
Coming in
the backdrop of an aggressively tariffing United States, the prospect of
trading freely with nearly 2 billion people representing almost 25% of the world’s
GDP, is an exciting prospect indeed.
Long years
in the negotiating, the India-EU FTA is likely to be signed on the 27th
of February, after the President of the EU Council, Mr Antonio Costa, and
President of the European Commission, Ms Ursula von der Leyen grace the
occasion as chief guests on India’s 77th
Republic Day on the 26th of
January 2026.
The world
has changed a great deal in President Donald Trump’s second term emphasis on ‘America First’, and added some
urgency as well as flexibility to the FTA negotiating process.
The EU has also just announced this week in
Brussels that it will also proceed with a security and defence partnership with
India as per the EU Foreign Policy Chief Kaja Kallas. Both France and Germany
are negotiating mega deals in fighter aircraft and submarine collaborations
presently amongst other things. India is also favoured in the defence and other
related and unrelated spheres by the United States, Israel, Russia, Brazil,
Spain, Japan, South Korea, and Britain,
with various projects underway and under consideration.
India is
also keen to make its own civilian aircraft, ships and tankers, its own
computer chips in collaboration with Taiwan, other electronics manufacturing
and assembly, rare earth mining and development, nuclear energy, railway and
metro modernisation and development, in addition to a massive defence
manufacturing push encompassing the army, navy, air force, space, satellite,
deep sea, and intelligence sectors.
From the
Indian point of view, an FTA with the EU will boost technology absorption under
its aatmanirbhar programmes in diverse fields, double the exports to
Europe, lead to greater employment opportunities and exchanges including
education and medical science, robotics, drones, UAVs, and progress in IT and
AI adoption all to an unprecedented degree. Indian trained and educated manpower is a
strength not only in India but in Europe as well. The EU-India FTA will be the biggest for India
so far, representing a decisive entry into a global value chain.
The prospect
of India signing the interim trade agreement with the US, recently endorsed by
President Trump at Davos, despite the 50% tariffs imposed on India, will redouble
India’s position in the global value chain with many leading American companies
choosing to set up development centres in India. These include Google and
Amazon. Once the EU-India FTA becomes a reality, the Americans will be keen to
proceed with the Indo-US interim trade deal at the earliest too.
India’s
multilateral approach has paid good dividends in terms of diversification of
its collaborators and markets, and kept its growth trajectory intact and
expanding, despite punitive tariffs imposed by the US. These tariffs are likely
to be reduced shortly to no more than 15% even as other countries in the
littoral who have been granted lower tariff rates compared to India, have not
managed to keep pace with it.
It now seems
certain that not only will India become the third largest economy in the world
after the US and China by 2028 or 2030, but it will also become a middle-income
economy with a per capita income of over $ 4,000 despite its massive globe
beating population.
India is
also edging closer to China in economic matters as its border tensions come
under better control. This is important from the point of view of not being
allied to any power blocks, but pursuing its strategic and national interest
first. This is favoured, of course, by India’s long-term friend and ally Russia
for balance, and makes it clear to those inimical to India’s progress that dogma
is not a guiding principle for India. As
India strengthens its relationship with countries in West Asia, Greece, Cyprus,
Israel, Egypt, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Armenia, Nigeria, Ethiopia, and with those
in the Asia-Pacific such as Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Vietnam and
Thailand, it gains rich dividends from its non-discriminatory and independent
foreign policy. In time, India will be featured in most geo-political and
strategic crossroads as a viable and valuable partner.
(1,045
words)
January
22nd, 2026
For:
Firstpost/News18.com
Gautam
Mukherjee
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