Blitz Bureau
Negotiators describe an interim trade agreement between India and the United States as close, even as New Delhi signals it is in no rush ahead of July 24, when a temporary US tariff arrangement is set to expire and standard rates would otherwise return.
A two-day ministerial between Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer reviewed the core elements of a first-phase Bilateral Trade Agreement — market access, digital trade and non-tariff barriers — working toward the “Mission 500” goal of $500 billion in two-way trade by 2030. India has proposed cutting tariffs on US industrial goods and a range of farm products, and signalled intent to buy up to $500 billion of US energy, aircraft and technology over five years.
India is negotiating from strength — insisting any deal must give its exporters better terms than competing economies, not merely a truce on tariffs.
At a Glance
- Deadline: July 24 (temporary US tariff regime expires)
- Goal: “Mission 500” — $500 bn trade by 2030
- India offer: Lower tariffs on US industrial & farm goods
- Purchase intent: Up to $500 bn US energy, aircraft, tech over 5 yrs
New Delhi’s condition is explicit: India wants terms more favourable than those available to rival exporters such as Vietnam and other ASEAN economies before it signs. A separate USTR proposal for a 12.5% Section 301 tariff remains open for public comment, one of the technical threads still being tied off.
A well-judged interim deal would steady the trading relationship through a volatile global moment and lay the foundation for the far larger agreement both sides envisage.













