Blitz Bureau
NEW DELHI: With Washington’s temporary 10% baseline tariff due to lapse on July 24, India and the United States are described by negotiators as being in the closing stretch of talks on an interim trade agreement, with both sides reporting “substantial” progress after a third round of negotiations. It is the first slice of a broader pact both frame around “Mission 500,” a goal of $500 billion in two-way trade by 2030.
New Delhi has been clear that it is negotiating for terms, not to a calendar: it will sign when the framework gives Indian exporters a genuine competitive edge over rival economies. The open items are familiar — market access, digital trade, supply-chain resilience and non-tariff barriers — with Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer leading the recent rounds. Agricultural access, including US requests on products from tree nuts to soybean oil, remains among the harder questions.
The deadline concentrates minds, but the real win is predictability — locking steady access to a top market rather than shaving a point off any single tariff line.
At a Glance
- Deadline: Temporary 10% US tariff lapses July 24
- Status: Third round; “substantial” progress reported
- Goal: “Mission 500” — $500bn two-way trade by 2030
- Sticking point: Farm-goods access; digital trade; non-tariff barriers
The push sits inside a fast-widening trade map — the UK pact live on July 15, the fresh New Zealand upgrade this weekend, and a concluded India–EU deal moving toward signature. For exporters, a spread of preferential markets is the surest hedge against any single partner’s policy swings.
The constructive course is a balanced deal over a hurried one: clear, durable terms that firms can plan around. Closed with care, the interim agreement would give India steadier access to one of its largest markets and round out an unusually productive season of trade diplomacy.













