India will face a revenue loss of Rs 4060 crore in the first year of FTA with Britain, claims GTRI
GTRI: GTRI has said that the India-UK free trade agreement signed on July 24 will reduce the customs revenue of both the countries, as duties on various items have been reduced or eliminated. Let us know about this in detail.
India is likely to lose customs revenue of Rs 4,060 crore in the initial year of free trade agreement with Britain, as taxes on several items have been lowered or abolished. Think tank Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI) stated this on Monday, quoting current import data from Britain.
The report said that by year 10, as the tariff elimination is widely implemented in a phased manner, the annual loss is estimated to increase to Rs 6,345 crore or about 574 million British pounds based on FY 2025 trade volume.
GTRI has said that the India-UK free trade agreement signed on July 24 will reduce customs revenue of both countries, as duties on various items have been reduced or eliminated. India imports goods worth USD 8.6 billion from the UK in 2024-25. These imports comprise a large proportion of industrial products and attract a weighted average tariff of 9.2 per cent.