
US Imposes Massive 25% Tariff on Indian Goods Amid Tensions Over Russian Oil Imports Trade War Escalates
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The big headline for the day: the United States has officially set a 25% blanket tariff on all Indian goods entering the country, with the Trump administration openly threatening to raise that rate even higher in the coming days. According to the Times of India, President Trump has stated publicly that India’s continued purchase of Russian crude oil is the main reason for this move. In an interview with CNBC, he dismissed India’s offer of potential “zero tariffs” for U.S. goods, saying that as long as India continues its Russian oil trade, tariffs will not only remain, but could rise “very substantially over the next 24 hours.” The official line from the Trump administration is that these tariffs are part of a broader effort to punish countries believed to be “financing” Russia’s war in Ukraine through energy purchases.
For context, the Economic Times highlights just how central U.S. trade is to India’s economy. The United States is India’s largest export destination, with a trade surplus that has nearly doubled in the past decade. India’s exports to the U.S. reached about $81 billion in 2024, including major products like garments, pharmaceuticals, petrochemicals, and jewelry. The new tariffs and threatened penalties could put nearly $64 billion of those exports at serious risk. According to a Reuters report cited in the Hindustan Times, internal Indian government assessments warn that the combined impact of a 25% tariff—plus a possible 10% penalty specifically tied to Russian oil—could erode Indian exporters’ price competitiveness and lead to substantial export losses.
Politically, India’s response has been firm. The Ministry of External Affairs has labeled the U.S. tariff moves “unjustified and unreasonable,” pointing out what they argue is a double standard: both the United States and European Union continue to import key resources from Russia, even as they pressure India to halt its own Russian dealings. India maintains that it will take “all necessary measures to safeguard its national interests and economic security.”
The Reserve Bank of India, meanwhile, is watching the situation closely. As reported by NDTV, the RBI has held its policy rate steady at 5.5% but admits that it’s too early to estimate the economic fallout from these escalating tariffs. Growth forecasts have been nudged lower, and Indian officials are emphasizing the importance of domestic economic resilience in the face of evolving global trade tensions.
In a particularly sharp development, Bloomberg Television notes that Trump is now also threatening much steeper tariffs—potentially up to 250%—on imported pharmaceuticals, a major Indian export sector, as part of a push to onshore drug manufacturing back to the U.S. This uncertainty is leaving Indian exporters, policymakers, and business leaders in a constant state of flux, as they await details on how high tariffs will actually go and whether last-minute diplomacy can avert further escalation.
Listeners, that’s the latest as the U.S.-India trade dispute continues to evolve at breakneck pace. We’ll be tracking every tariff headline and trade negotiation. Thank you for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe to stay up-to-date with all our India Tariff News and Tracker updates.
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