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The HinduJuly 16, 2026

​Export gains: On India’s trade data for June

India’s trade data for June offers insights into how the country is weathering the West Asia crisis and the prospect of a deficient monsoon. The fact that the trade deficit jumped 430% in June would seem alarming. However, a deeper look at the composition of this deficit should ease a lot of that alarm. The bulk of the increase in the deficit was due to the sharp increase in merchandise imports in June. And within this, it was led by crude, gold, fertilizers and electronic goods. The value of crude oil imports rose 40% in June 2026, reflecting the skyrocketing prices of oil a few months earlier. Gold prices have also been rising as uncertainty over the West Asia situation persists. The doubling of gold import duties in May would also have pushed up prices in June. With India’s natural gas supplies hit due to the West Asia constraints, it has had to import more fertilizer — 201% more by value over last June. The only one of these categories that has seen imports rise sharply due to domestic factors is the electronic goods segment. As India’s electronics manufacturing and assembly grow, more parts are going to come from abroad to fuel this engine. The government is encouraging this, as seen in its decision last week to remove the basic customs duty on imported parts in the manufacture of display assemblies, lithium-ion cells and inductor coil modules. These are essential if India wants to boost its manufacturing of high-end electronics such as smartphones, laptops and smart TVs. Going ahead, the attempt should also be to manufacture as many of these inputs locally so that these supply chains can be made truly secure. The good news is that India’s merchandise exports have put on a strong showing, not only in June 2026, but throughout the first quarter of 2026-27. Merchandise exports grew 15.5% in June and by an even quicker 16% in Q1. This was not simply a buoyancy granted by costly petroleum exports, either. Non-petroleum exports grew by a robust 16.5% in June and 12.4% in Q1. This is almost precisely the duration of the West Asia crisis. The data show that India’s exports to every region of the world except West Asia grew in Q1, and that a large portion of export growth was in volume terms as well as in value. Indian exporters are to be commended for diversifying so quickly. Service exports, however, grew only 2.9% in June and 6.2% in Q1. As Chief Economic Adviser V. Anantha Nageswaran has warned, success in areas such as Global Capability Centres should not be considered an end in itself — there is still far to go, and complacency will rob India of its advantage in this area. Published - July 16, 2026 12:10 am IST Read Comments Copy link Email Facebook Twitter Telegram LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit READ LATER SEE ALL Remove Related Topics India / trade policy / West Asia / Monsoon / Israel-US strikes on Iran / imports / oil and gas - upstream activities / gold and precious material / fertiliser / electronics / taxes and duties / economy (general)

Key GK Takeaways for CLAT
  • 1Trade policy in India is constitutionally a Union subject under Entry 41 of the Union List (Schedule VII), giving the central government exclusive authority over customs duties and import-export policy. Decisions like removing basic customs duty on electronics components are typically notified through the Finance Ministry under the Customs Tariff Act, 1975. This centralised architecture means states have limited direct say in shaping India's external trade responses to global shocks.
  • 2The West Asia crisis referenced in the editorial echoes historical precedents where regional conflicts, such as the 1990-91 Gulf War, disrupted India's oil imports and remittances from the region. India imports over eighty percent of its crude oil needs, making it structurally vulnerable to West Asian supply and price shocks. The editorial's point about export diversification away from West Asia reflects a broader strategic push, seen also in India's Free Trade Agreement with the UAE signed in 2022.
  • 3Changes to customs duty rates, such as the doubling of gold import duties mentioned in the editorial, are implemented under the Customs Act, 1962 and the Customs Tariff Act, 1975, typically via government notifications rather than fresh legislation. The Directorate General of Foreign Trade, under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, administers India's Foreign Trade Policy governing exporter incentives. Disputes over customs valuation or duty classification are adjudicated by the Customs, Excise and Service Tax Appellate Tribunal.
  • 4India's non-petroleum exports growing 16.5% in June, against services export growth of just 2.9%, highlights a structural gap in India's traditionally services-led export economy. Global Capability Centres alone were estimated to number over 1,700 in India by the mid-2020s, employing well over a million people, making the Chief Economic Adviser's caution against complacency economically significant. Continued export diversification is critical given that India's current account deficit remains sensitive to crude oil price swings of even a few dollars per barrel.

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