Relevance: GS Paper II (International Relations), GS Paper III (External Trade, Employment)
Source: The Hindu; Government of India trade briefings; global trade outlook reports
Key Takeaways
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Context
India and New Zealand have concluded negotiations on a Free Trade Agreement (FTA), signalling India’s renewed push towards calibrated trade liberalisation in the Indo-Pacific. Unlike earlier blanket liberalisation, the agreement reflects a strategic, sector-selective approach that balances export growth, employment generation, and domestic sensitivities.
Salient Features of the Agreement
| Dimension | Key Provisions |
| Trade Objective | Doubling bilateral trade to USD 5 billion within five years |
| Goods Market Access | Improved access for textiles, leather, engineering goods, pharmaceuticals, gems & jewellery, auto components, chemicals, and select agricultural products |
| Tariff Liberalisation | Phased reduction or elimination of customs duties on a significant share of traded goods |
| Services & Mobility | 5,000 employment visas annually for Indian professionals, with stays up to three years |
| Investment & Supply Chains | Encourages investment inflows, MSME participation, and supply-chain diversification |
| Digital & New-Age Areas | Cooperation in digital trade, innovation, and modern services |
Strategic and Economic Significance
- Indo-Pacific economic engagement: Extends India’s Indo-Pacific strategy beyond security to trade-led regional integration.
- Export diversification: Reduces dependence on traditional markets such as the United States and Europe, a vulnerability flagged in global trade assessments.
- Employment and skills mobility: Strengthens India’s services-led growth model by facilitating overseas employment for skilled professionals.
- Geoeconomic resilience: Supports diversified supply chains, aligning with global concerns highlighted by international financial institutions amid geopolitical uncertainty.
Challenges and Areas of Caution
- Agricultural sensitivities: India remains cautious on dairy and farm imports, given livelihood concerns of small farmers and past experiences with trade shocks.
- Implementation gap: Benefits will materialise only if there is regulatory harmonisation, exporter awareness, and MSME preparedness, a recurring concern in India’s export strategy reviews.
Key Terms Explained
- Free Trade Agreement: Arrangement to reduce or eliminate trade barriers between partner countries.
- Indo-Pacific: Integrated strategic and economic space linking the Indian and Pacific Oceans.
- Services Trade: Cross-border exchange of professional, digital, and skill-based services.
- Supply-Chain Diversification: Reducing reliance on a narrow set of markets or suppliers.
- Digital Trade: Trade enabled through digital platforms, data flows, and online services.
| UPSC Value Box
Why this issue matters:
Key challenge & reform:
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One-Line Wrap
The India–New Zealand FTA marks a strategic turn in India’s trade policy—liberal where competitive, cautious where vulnerable.
Q. “Discuss how the India–New Zealand Free Trade Agreement reflects India’s evolving trade strategy in the Indo-Pacific region.”
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