India’s Agriculture Exports Surge Despite U.S. Tariff Barriers

Agriculture Exports

Agriculture Exports Latest News

  • India’s agricultural exports have grown significantly faster than its overall merchandise exports. 
  • In April–September 2025, farm exports rose by 8.8%, reaching $25.9 billion, compared to $23.8 billion in the same period of 2024. 
  • This growth far outstripped the 2.9% increase in total goods exports during the same period.
  • The trend is consistent with the previous financial year (2024–25), when agricultural exports increased by 6.4% (from $48.8 billion to $52 billion), while overall merchandise exports saw only a marginal 0.1% rise.

Key Drivers of India’s Export Growth

  • Strong Performance by Major Agri-Export Segments - India’s agricultural export growth in 2025-26 has been led by non-basmati rice, buffalo meat, marine products, coffee, and fruits & vegetables — each surpassing or nearing previous record levels.
  • Non-Basmati Rice: Growth After Lifting of Export Curbs - Export buoyancy is largely due to the removal of restrictions imposed in 2022–23 to contain food inflation. With good monsoons and high government stocks, non-basmati rice exports are on track to exceed the record $6.5 billion achieved last year.
  • Buffalo Meat: Set to Break Decade-Old Record - Buffalo meat exports may surpass the 2014-15 peak of $4.8 billion, supported by rising demand in key markets.
  • Marine Products: Rising Despite Trump Tariffs - Marine product exports rose 17.4% in April–September 2025 and could exceed the historic $8.1 billion (2022-23). Despite the 58% U.S. tariff, exports grew from $3.4 billion to $4 billion, as exporters diversified into China, Vietnam, Japan, Thailand, EU, and Canada.
  • Coffee Exports: Driven by High Global Prices - Coffee exports more than doubled from $739 million (2019-20) to $1.8 billion (2024-25) and may exceed $2 billion this year. The rise is driven mainly by soaring global prices as ending stocks fall to a 25-year low, rather than higher volumes.
  • Fruits & Vegetables: Consistent Growth in Fresh and Processed Form - Both fresh and processed fruits & vegetables continue steady export growth.

Global Food Prices as the Main Driver

  • The FAO Food Price Index declined from 119.1 (2013-14) to 90 (2015-16), stayed below 100 until 2019-20, then shot up to 102.4, 133.1, and 140.6 in the next three years.
  • As global prices softened afterward, India’s farm exports also dipped to $48.8 billion (2023-24) and $52 billion (2024-25).
  • Export clampdowns on wheat, rice, sugar, onions, and de-oiled rice bran — imposed to control domestic inflation — further contributed to the fall in shipments.

Outlook for 2025–26: Prices and Tariffs to Shape Performance

  • Export performance for the second half of 2025-26 will hinge on:
    • Global Commodity Prices
      • FAO index in October 2025 was 126.4, far below the 2022 post-Ukraine peak of 160.2.
      • Subindices for cereals (103.6) and sugar (94.1) hit multi-year lows.
      • Low global prices usually depress India’s agri-export value.
    • Trump Tariffs
    • US tariffs have begun to hurt: Marine products (26.9%); Spices (45.1%); Basmati rice (17.8%) (September YoY to the US).
  • Signs of Improvement: Tariff Rollback and Possible Trade Deal
    • There are positive developments:
      • A potential India–US trade deal may materialise before year-end.
      • The US President has rolled back tariffs on several food products — including spices, coffee, tea, and fresh fruits — directly benefiting Indian exporters.

Rising Farm Imports Outpace Overall Import Growth

  • India’s agricultural imports grew 5.9% in April–September 2025 (from $18.4 bn to $19.5 bn), outpacing overall imports, which rose 4.5% during the same period.
  • Unlike exports, India’s farm imports are not diversified and remain dominated by just a few commodities, primarily:
    • Vegetable oils
    • Pulses
    • Fresh fruits
    • Raw cotton

Vegetable Oils: India’s Top Import Item

  • Vegetable oil imports soared 13.5% in April–September 2025.
  • Imports are likely to approach the record $20.8 bn level of 2022–23.
  • This remains India’s single largest agricultural import.

Pulses: Imports Decline After Previous Surge

  • Pulses imports hit an all-time high of $5.5 bn in 2024–25.
  • In 2025–26, they have fallen sharply due to:
    • A bumper domestic crop
    • Reimposition of import duties lifted earlier during high inflation.

Fresh Fruit Imports Expand Rapidly

  • Fresh fruit imports crossed $3 bn in 2024–25.
  • April–September 2025 imports were $1.5 bn.
  • The US is now the dominant supplier, accounting for 50.4%, thanks to high demand for:
    • Almonds
    • Pistachios
    • Walnuts
    • Other dry fruits

Raw Cotton: India Turns Net Importer

  • India has shifted from being a net exporter to a net importer of raw cotton.
  • Imports are expected to exceed $1.5 bn this fiscal.
  • The key reason: domestic yield stagnation due to the absence of new technologies post-Bt cotton.

Source: IE

Agriculture Exports FAQs

Q1: Why are India’s agricultural exports outperforming overall merchandise exports?

Ans: Strong growth in non-basmati rice, buffalo meat, seafood, coffee, and fruits & vegetables has pushed agricultural exports ahead of total exports despite global price volatility.

Q2: How did exporters manage U.S. tariff pressures?

Ans: Seafood exporters diversified to China, Vietnam, Japan, Thailand, EU, and Canada, offsetting the sharp tariff shock from the U.S. while sustaining overall export momentum.

Q3: What role did global food prices play in the export trend?

Ans: A surge in global food prices boosted export values earlier, but recent price declines have moderated growth, especially for commodities linked to international price cycles.

Q4: How have India’s coffee exports doubled in five years?

Ans: Rising global prices due to low ending stocks, rather than higher volumes, drove the value of India’s coffee exports from $739 million to $1.8 billion.

Q5: Which agricultural imports have grown the fastest in recent years?

Ans: Vegetable oils, fresh fruits, and raw cotton have driven import growth, with India becoming a major U.S. market for dry fruits and shifting to net cotton imports due to yield stagnation.

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