Exports Rise to USD 714.73 Billion in
FY 2025–26 (Apr–Jan)
Ø Government Strengthens Export Ecosystem
to Expand India’s Global Trade Footprint
Ø Government Launches “RELIEF” Scheme to
Mitigate Export Risks from Geopolitical Disruptions
Key Points
·
Export growth:
o Total exports (merchandise + services)
reached USD 714.73 billion (Apr–Jan FY 2025–26).
o Up USD 36 billion from last year
(USD 679.02 billion), a 5.26% growth.
o CAGR of 6.9% from FY 2021–22 to
FY 2024–25, rising from USD 497.90 billion (2020–21) to USD 828.25 billion (2024–25).
·
Resilience despite challenges: Growth sustained amid global uncertainty, supply chain
disruptions, and volatile commodity prices.
·
Policy support:
o Foreign Trade Policy (FTP) 2023 built on four pillars: trade facilitation,
export promotion, state partnerships, digital integration.
o RoDTEP scheme neutralizes embedded taxes to keep exports
competitive.
o Export Promotion Mission (EPM 2) approved with Rs. 25,060 crores
(FY 2025–26 to FY 2030–31), focusing on trade finance (Niryat
Protsahan) and logistics/market access (Niryat Disha).
·
Risk mitigation:
o Launch of RELIEF Scheme under ECGC
to address geopolitical risks in Gulf & West Asia maritime corridor.
o ECGC continues to provide export credit
guarantees.
o TIES scheme builds export-linked infrastructure.
·
Digital trade governance:
o Platforms like 24×7 EIC interface,
Trade Intelligence & Analytics, Certificates of Origin portal,
and Trade e-Connect enable faster, transparent, and fully online trade processes.
·
Trade diplomacy:
o India has 19 FTAs; since 2021,
concluded/advanced 8 major agreements.
o Landmark India–EU FTA offers access
to nearly entire EU tariff universe.
o India–EFTA TEPA includes FDI commitments.
o Ongoing negotiations with UK, New Zealand,
Oman, Israel, Canada, GCC, Chile, Peru.
·
Strategic impact: Integrated approach combining incentives, digital facilitation, institutional
reforms, and proactive diplomacy positions India as a trusted, technology-driven
global trade partner.
·
Official statement: Minister of State Shri Jitin Prasada highlighted India’s whole-of-government
approach to building a resilient and future-ready export ecosystem.
[ABS News Service/25.03.2026]
India’s trade performance has remained
robust and resilient, with exports recording a steady upward trajectory both in
the current fiscal year (FY 2025–26, Apr–Jan) and over the longer term (FY 2021–25).
Despite persistent global uncertainty, supply chain disruptions, and volatile commodity
prices, India’s exports have continued to expand in a broad-based manner. During
Apr–Jan of FY 2025–26, total exports of merchandise and services rose by USD 36
billion, registering a growth of 5.26% from USD 679.02 billion in FY 2024–25 (Apr–Jan)
to USD 714.73 billion. Over the period 2021–22 to 2024–25, exports achieved a compound
annual growth rate of 6.9%, with values increasing sharply from USD 497.90 billion
in 2020–21 to USD 828.25 billion in 2024–25. This consistent expansion underscores
India’s ability to sustain diversified and resilient export growth, positioning
the country as a strong player in global trade even under challenging external conditions.
The Government is consistently working
to boost exports and expand the country’s global footprint, combining traditional
strengths with emerging technology‑driven sectors. Central to this ambition
is the creation of a supportive ecosystem where exporters,
particularly MSMEs, can compete confidently in international markets. This effort
is reinforced by a dynamic policy framework, strong financial incentives, a growing
digital infrastructure, improved trade facilitation, and a determined push to secure
deeper market access through next‑generation trade agreements.
The Foreign Trade Policy (FTP) 2023, designed
as a flexible and evolving framework to adapt to global shifts, has emerged as a
key enabler of India’s export momentum. Built on four core pillars - trade facilitation,
export promotion, state‑level partnerships, and digital integration - the
FTP is further reinforced by targeted export promotion schemes that collectively
enhance India’s competitiveness in global markets.
The RoDTEP scheme
plays a central role by neutralizing embedded taxes on exports and enabling Indian
goods to remain competitive worldwide. The recently launched Export Promotion Mission
(EPM) 2 further reinforces this effort through two targeted pillars: expanding access
to affordable trade finance and upgrading quality, logistics, branding, and market‑readiness
across the export value chain. The Government has approved the EPM with a budgetary
outlay of Rs. 25,060 crores (FY 2025–26 to FY 2030–31). It operates through Niryat Protsahan (focusing on trade
finance and credit enhancement) and Niryat Disha (focusing
on export logistics, warehousing, and market access), specifically targeting MSME
competitiveness.
The Government has recently notified a
time-limited “RELIEF” Scheme, an intervention under the Export Promotion Mission,
to be implemented through the Export Credit Guarantee Corporation of India (ECGC),
is operationalised to address elevated export risks arising from geopolitical disruptions
in the Gulf and West Asia maritime corridor.
Together with the Export Credit Guarantee
Corporation (ECGC), which provides critical risk‑mitigation support for exports,
and schemes like Trade Infrastructure for Export Scheme (TIES) that build export‑linked
infrastructure across the country.
Running parallel to these financial and
policy instruments is India’s accelerating shift toward technology‑enabled
trade governance. A strong digital backbone powered by platforms such as the 24×7
EIC interface, the Trade Intelligence & Analytics platform, the Common Digital
Platform for Certificates of Origin, and the Trade e-Connect portal has transformed
how exporters access information, approvals, and global markets. These systems enable
fully online processing, real‑time compliance updates, digital certification,
faster turnaround times, and easier access to global market intelligence. The outcome
is a trade ecosystem that is more transparent, data‑driven, efficient, and
equitable.
Proactive trade diplomacy complements
policy measures and expanding digital infrastructure, reinforcing the country’s
efforts to strengthen global market access and enhance export competitiveness. With
19 FTAs and a renewed push since 2021 wherein India has concluded or advanced eight
major agreements with key partners. The India-EU FTA, a landmark pact offering access
to almost the entire EU tariff universe, marks a significant step in integrating
India more deeply into global value chains. The India-EFTA Trade and Economic Partnership
Agreement (TEPA) is India’s first FTA to include a dedicated commitment aiming to
increase FDI from their investors. Trade agreements with New Zealand, Oman and UK
will broaden market access, enhance services mobility, secure long‑term investments,
and create predictable regulatory environments for businesses. Meanwhile, ongoing
negotiations with Israel, Canada, GCC nations, Chile, and Peru indicate India’s
determination to expand high‑value trade corridors across regions.
India’s export strategy reflects a decisive
whole‑of‑government approach, moving beyond transactional support to
building a resilient, competitive, and future‑ready ecosystem. By combining
targeted financial incentives, technology‑enabled trade facilitation, institutional
reforms, and proactive market‑access initiatives, the focus is on embedding
digital governance, expanding global reach, and strengthening exporter capabilities
across sectors and regions. This integrated approach positions India not just as
a participant, but as a trusted, technology‑driven partner in global trade.
This information was given by the Minister
of State for Ministry of Commerce & Industry, Jitin Prasada, in Lok Sabha
on 24 March, 2026.