Farm exports from India

From Indpaedia
Revision as of 19:57, 20 August 2025 by Jyoti Sharma (Jyoti) (Talk | contribs)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Hindi English French German Italian Portuguese Russian Spanish

This is a collection of articles archived by a well-meaning Mayang because of
the excellence of the articles' content. Manipuri readers can help by
converting these articles into an encyclopaedia-style entry,
deleting portions of the kind normally not used in encyclopaedia entries.
Please also fill in missing details; put categories, headings and sub-headings;
and combine this with other articles on exactly the same subject.

Readers will be able to edit existing articles and post new articles directly
on their online archival encyclopædia only after its formal launch.


See examples and a tutorial.



Contents

Overall

2003>2025

Harish Damodaran, Aug 11, 2025: The Indian Express

India exported goods valued at $437.4 billion during 2024-25, which was 0.1% higher than the $437.1 billion in the previous financial year ended March 31, 2025.

During April-June 2025, total exports, at $112 billion, were 1.7% up over the $110.1 billion for April-June 2024.

What’s interesting, though, is the performance of India’sagricultural produce exports. These registered 6.4% growth, from $48.8 billion in 2023-24 to $51.9 billion in 2024-25. The first three months of this fiscal have posted a further 5.8% year-on-year increase over April-June 2024.

If current trends hold, farm exports could even touch $55 billion in 2025-26, surpassing the previous record of $53.2 billion achieved in 2022-23. Contrast that with the country’s overall merchandise exports, which has witnessed virtually flat growth and with the 2022-23 peak of $451.1
billion unlikely to be crossed this fiscal.

This newspaper had reported last week that India’s agricultural exports to even the United States has been buoyant, growing by 24.1% in January-June 2025 over January-June 2024.

What is driving farm exports?

Between 2003-04 and 2013-14, India’s exports of farm produce soared from a mere $7.5 billion to $43.3 billion.

The accompanying chart shows it falling thereafter till 2020-21 and then picking up to hit an all-time-high of $53.2 billion in 2022-23. The latter came on the back of a recovery in global agri-commodity prices: The UN Food and Agriculture Organization’s food price index (base year: 2014-16=100) rose from an average of 96.4 points in 2019-20 to 140.6 points in 2022-23.

The decline in 2023-24 was largely attributable to it being a drought year and the Narendra Modi-led government banning or restricting shipments of a host of commodities – from wheat, rice and sugar to onion – in response to rising domestic food inflation.

Those curbs have been gradually relaxed, with an easing of inflationary pressures owing to a monsoon-aided agricultural production rebound in 2024-25. A second consecutive above-normal monsoon this year should enable the Modi government to also lift the export restrictions on sugar  India’s net exports of the sweetener collapsed from $5.5 billion in 2022-23 to $771.3 million in 2024-25.

Almost all major export items have recorded impressive growth during the first quarter of this fiscal: Marine products, non-basmati rice, buffalo meat, coffee, tobacco and fruits & vegetables, both fresh and processed (table 1).

Indian coffee exporters have benefitted from global ending stocks for 2024-25 depleting to their lowest since 1999-2000, mainly courtesy of subpar crops in Brazil and Vietnam, the world’s biggest producers of arabica and robusta varieties respectively. India mostly exports robusta beans and powder used in instant coffee and espresso blends. Tobacco exports have similarly got a boost from output shortfalls in Brazil and Zimbabwe.

The coming months may well see exports come under pressure, especially due to President Trump’s 50% prospective tariffs on Indian goods from August 27. The maximum impact of it would be on marine products, where the US has a 35% share in India’s exports. In some products such as frozen shrimps and prawns, more than $1.9 billion out of the $4.5 billion worth of exports in 2024-25 went to the US.

The US has clamped a 50% import duty on goods imports from Brazil too. The US accounted for some $2.1 billion out of Brazil’s overall coffee exports of $12.3 billion in 2024. If Trump does not exempt coffee from his 50% tariff, that exportable surplus may then find its way to other markets,
depressing prices and, in turn, hurt Indian shipments.

What are the import trends?

India exports more farm produce than it imports.

While the country had an overall deficit of $282.8 billion in its overall merchandise trade account during 2024-25 (as imports, at $720.2 billion, exceeded exports of $437.4 billion), it was the other way for agriculture. In its case, there was a surplus of $13.4 billion, from exports ($51.9 billion) being higher than imports ($38.5 billion).

However, it can be seen from the chart that the agricultural trade surplus has more than halved from $27.7 billion in 2013-14. The reason: Imports going up at a faster pace than exports.

Unlike exports, India’s farm imports are limited to a few commodities. More than two-thirds of the value of imports in 2024-25 were from vegetable oils, pulses and fresh fruits (table 2). Fresh fruits included almonds, pistachios, walnuts and other tree nuts (worth $1.7 billion, out of which $1.1 billion was from the US), in addition to apples, grapes/raisins, kiwis, figs, pears and dates.

India’s pulses imports scaled a new high of 7.3 million tonnes, valued at $5.5 billion last fiscal. This came as the Modi government slashed import duties, in the wake of the El Niño- drought of 2023-24 whose effects extended up to the end of 2024. Imports of pulses have been less this year, thanks to a bumper domestic crop.

On the other hand, imports of vegetable oils – basically palm, soyabean and sunflower – continue to go up, with domestic production unable to match increasing demand. A similar trend is visible in cotton and natural rubber: Their production has actually dipped from their highs reached in 2013-14 and 2012-13 respectively, forcing more imports to meet domestic consumption requirements.

For now, India remains a net exporter of agricultural produce.

Exports to the USA

2013

India’s farm products face US import hurdles

Sidhartha TNN

The Times of India 2013/07/12


Mangoes

Mango exports to the USA

New Delhi: After claiming a major victory in “mango diplomacy” with the US, the government has realized that it was sold a lemon.

Despite the US agreeing to import Indian mangoes after irradiation to cut the risk of fruit flies and stone weevil, the quantity of the fruit shipped from India has not climbed significantly. The government blames the prohibitive cost which it has to pay according to the agreement reached with Washington.

With a little over 1,300 tonnes exported from India, the average cost per ton works out to $318, which is nearly 12% of the cost of a mango and its transportation cost, said an officer. The government has suggested that the National Plant Protection Organization (NPPO) could be asked to do the job to help reduce costs and boost exports.

Instead, the US has suggested that local inspectors be hired by the US Embassy, which will reduce the cost of pre-clearance programme by about around $25,000 a season. It isn’t just mangoes — the same story is repeated across various farm products with the Indian shipments facing restrictions.

Basmati

Indian basmati has been put on an import alert by the USFDA, which says that a fungicide, tricyclazole, was detected in some consignments. This can lead to detention of the rice without examination.

Pomegranates

Similarly, in case of pomegranates, the US recently allowed imports from India but the details of the irradiation treatment are yet to be finalized. In the case of grapes, India had sought market access in March 2008 and provided information on the pest risk analysis, but the US now wants information on the economic losses caused by some pests.


Litchis

For litchis, exports have not been allowed as the US Environmental Protection Agency has not cleared the maximum residue limit (MRL) of sulphur dioxide, an issue which is being discussed for two years now. Indian officials said there has been little progress in farm trade,

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox
Translate