The switch has been thrown. From Wednesday, July 15, the India–United Kingdom Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement is formally in force, and about 99% of Indian tariff lines now enter the British market duty-free. A pact concluded in May last year and signed in London in July has, from this morning, become a working tool in the hands of a garment unit in Tiruppur, a shrimp exporter in Andhra Pradesh and a components maker in Pune — and it arrives just as India posts its strongest-ever start to a financial year on exports.
The timing sharpens the story. Commerce ministry data released this week show overall exports of goods and services reached a record $232.73 billion in the April–June quarter, up 11.37% year-on-year, the highest first-quarter figure ever recorded. Merchandise exports alone rose 15.92% for the quarter, with June shipments at $40.41 billion; strikingly, exports to ASEAN jumped 66.9% and to Africa 53.1%, evidence that Indian goods are already winning new ground before the UK gains even register.
A trade deal is only paper until the day it takes effect. Today is that day — and it opens onto India’s best export quarter on record.
To make the pact usable from the first hour, the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs has already issued the operational framework for self-certification of origin, letting exporters claim preferential tariffs without waiting on paperwork bottlenecks. A companion Double Contribution Convention, also live today, spares Indian professionals on temporary UK postings from paying social security in both countries for up to five years — a saving officials estimate reaches more than 75,000 workers and lands straight on the services trade.
Britain is the first of a sequence, and the constructive task now shifts from signing to uptake. An interim understanding with the United States is reported “very, very close” ahead of a July 24 tariff step, and a concluded India–EU agreement is moving toward signature. The widening trade deficit — imports outran exports in June on costlier crude — is a reminder that market access must be matched by competitiveness at home: rules-of-origin guidance, standards recognition and trade finance that reaches mid-sized firms. Get that plumbing right, and today’s milestone becomes next year’s order book.













