<p>India was slapped with a reciprocal tax by the United States on Wednesday, as President Donald Trump raised trade barriers on all goods entering America.</p><p>Below are some of the key points:</p>.<p>A flat 26 per cent tariff was imposed on all goods being exported by India to the United States, amidst reciprocal tariffs in the range of 10 per cent-49 per cent unveiled by Trump for other countries.</p><p>The United States imposes a 2.5 per cent tariff on passenger vehicle imports, while India imposes 70 per cent, the White House said in a statement. Apples are allowed to enter US duty free, but India imposes 50 per cent duty on US apples coming in to India, while rice attracts 2.7 per cent in US, in India it is at 80 per cent.</p><p>On networking switches and routers, the United States imposes a 0% tariff, but India levies higher rates 10-20 per cent, the statement added.</p><p>The US has a trade deficit of $46 billion with India.</p>.<p>Nearly $14 billion worth of electronics products and over $9 billion worth of gems and jewellery are among the top sectors to be hit by the US tariffs. While the 26 per cent tariff will not apply to auto parts and aluminium products, those will still attract the 25 per cent tariff that Trump had announced earlier.</p><p>The White House said pharmaceutical products, which comprise nearly $9 billion worth of exports from India as per government data, and energy products are exempt under the latest round of tariffs.</p><p>Washington's previous sector-wide average tariffs on India for automobiles, gems and jewellery, chemicals and pharmaceuticals and electronic products stood at 1.05 per cent, 2.12 per cent, 1.06 per cent, and 0.41per cent, respectively, as per Global Trade Research Initiative.</p> .<p>US has levied a 34 per cent reciprocal tax on China, Japan's exports to US will attract 24 per cent, Thailand 36 per cent, Bangladesh 37 per cent, Malaysia 24 per cent, Taiwan at 32 per cent, South Korea at 25 per cent and Vietnam will attract 46 per cent - one of the highest.</p>.<p>The White House statement said India imposes its own uniquely burdensome and/or duplicative testing and certification requirements in sectors such as chemicals, telecom products, and medical devices that make it difficult or costly for American companies to sell their products in India.</p><p>"If these barriers were removed, it is estimated that US exports would increase by at least $5.3 billion annually," it said.</p>.<p>During Prime Minister Narendra Modi's US visit in February, the two nations agreed to start talks towards clinching an early trade deal and resolving their standoff on tariffs.</p><p><em>Reuters</em> has reported that India is open to cutting tariffs substantially for over $23 billion worth of US goods being sold to India.</p><p>With Trump charging a higher tariff on China, sectors where India can gain market share in shipments to US include textiles, apparel and footwear, according to an internal Indian government report reviewed by Reuters.</p><p>India sees an opportunity in raising exports of iron and steel products too, where it has manufacturing competence, "especially if tariffs on China are higher," according to the report.</p>
<p>India was slapped with a reciprocal tax by the United States on Wednesday, as President Donald Trump raised trade barriers on all goods entering America.</p><p>Below are some of the key points:</p>.<p>A flat 26 per cent tariff was imposed on all goods being exported by India to the United States, amidst reciprocal tariffs in the range of 10 per cent-49 per cent unveiled by Trump for other countries.</p><p>The United States imposes a 2.5 per cent tariff on passenger vehicle imports, while India imposes 70 per cent, the White House said in a statement. Apples are allowed to enter US duty free, but India imposes 50 per cent duty on US apples coming in to India, while rice attracts 2.7 per cent in US, in India it is at 80 per cent.</p><p>On networking switches and routers, the United States imposes a 0% tariff, but India levies higher rates 10-20 per cent, the statement added.</p><p>The US has a trade deficit of $46 billion with India.</p>.<p>Nearly $14 billion worth of electronics products and over $9 billion worth of gems and jewellery are among the top sectors to be hit by the US tariffs. While the 26 per cent tariff will not apply to auto parts and aluminium products, those will still attract the 25 per cent tariff that Trump had announced earlier.</p><p>The White House said pharmaceutical products, which comprise nearly $9 billion worth of exports from India as per government data, and energy products are exempt under the latest round of tariffs.</p><p>Washington's previous sector-wide average tariffs on India for automobiles, gems and jewellery, chemicals and pharmaceuticals and electronic products stood at 1.05 per cent, 2.12 per cent, 1.06 per cent, and 0.41per cent, respectively, as per Global Trade Research Initiative.</p> .<p>US has levied a 34 per cent reciprocal tax on China, Japan's exports to US will attract 24 per cent, Thailand 36 per cent, Bangladesh 37 per cent, Malaysia 24 per cent, Taiwan at 32 per cent, South Korea at 25 per cent and Vietnam will attract 46 per cent - one of the highest.</p>.<p>The White House statement said India imposes its own uniquely burdensome and/or duplicative testing and certification requirements in sectors such as chemicals, telecom products, and medical devices that make it difficult or costly for American companies to sell their products in India.</p><p>"If these barriers were removed, it is estimated that US exports would increase by at least $5.3 billion annually," it said.</p>.<p>During Prime Minister Narendra Modi's US visit in February, the two nations agreed to start talks towards clinching an early trade deal and resolving their standoff on tariffs.</p><p><em>Reuters</em> has reported that India is open to cutting tariffs substantially for over $23 billion worth of US goods being sold to India.</p><p>With Trump charging a higher tariff on China, sectors where India can gain market share in shipments to US include textiles, apparel and footwear, according to an internal Indian government report reviewed by Reuters.</p><p>India sees an opportunity in raising exports of iron and steel products too, where it has manufacturing competence, "especially if tariffs on China are higher," according to the report.</p>