India–New Zealand to sign FTA to boost trade, investments and market access across goods and services
India and New Zealand signed a landmark Free Trade Agreement on April 27, 2026, following nine months of negotiations — described as a "once-in-a-generation"...
What Happened
- India and New Zealand signed a landmark Free Trade Agreement on April 27, 2026, following nine months of negotiations — described as a "once-in-a-generation" deal.
- New Zealand committed to granting 100% duty-free access to all Indian exports across all 8,284 tariff lines (textiles, apparel, leather, footwear, gems and jewellery, engineering goods, pharmaceuticals, processed foods) immediately upon the agreement entering into force.
- India offered 70% tariff liberalisation covering 95% of bilateral trade value; sensitive sectors including dairy, sugar, onions, chana, peas, and oilseeds are fully excluded from concessions.
- New Zealand pledged to facilitate USD 20 billion in foreign direct investment into India over 15 years, aligned with the Make in India initiative.
- The agreement includes 5,000 temporary employment visas annually for skilled Indian professionals (IT, healthcare, engineering, AYUSH practitioners, chefs) with up to three-year stay; it also covers 118 services sectors and 139 sub-sectors with Most-Favoured Nation treatment.
- The pact requires New Zealand Parliament ratification before entry into force, expected by end of 2026; India's Union Cabinet approval has already been obtained.
Static Topic Bridges
Free Trade Agreements: Concept and WTO Framework
A Free Trade Agreement (FTA) is a reciprocal arrangement between two or more countries that eliminates or reduces tariffs, quotas, and other trade barriers on goods and services exchanged between them. FTAs are legally permissible under Article XXIV of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which provides a derogation from the Most-Favoured Nation (MFN) principle under Article I of GATT. Under Article XXIV, FTA members must eliminate duties on "substantially all" trade between them, and must not raise barriers against non-member countries.
- WTO MFN principle: any tariff advantage extended to one country must be extended to all WTO members — FTAs are the principal exception to this rule.
- India distinguishes between FTAs (goods only), CECAs (Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreements), and CEPAs (Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreements — covering goods, services, investment, and rules).
- The India–New Zealand agreement spans 20 chapters, covering trade in goods, services, investment, trade remedies, dispute settlement, and a dedicated Health and Traditional Medicine Services chapter (AYUSH recognition — a first in Indian FTA history).
Connection to this news: The India–New Zealand FTA is structured as a comprehensive agreement broader than a standard FTA; New Zealand's 100% tariff elimination with India retaining a sensitive exclusion list is consistent with the GATT Article XXIV requirement of covering "substantially all trade."
India's FTA Network and Indo-Pacific Trade Strategy
India has been expanding its preferential trade architecture as part of a broader economic diplomacy strategy. Key agreements in force include the India–ASEAN FTA (goods 2010, services 2014), India–UAE CEPA (2022), India–Australia ECTA (2022), India–Japan CEPA, and India–South Korea CEPA. The New Zealand FTA marks India's first comprehensive bilateral trade agreement with a Pacific Island nation, deepening its Indo-Pacific engagement.
- Current bilateral merchandise trade (2024-25): USD 1.3 billion; services trade: USD 1.24 billion; combined ~USD 2.4 billion.
- Target: Double bilateral trade to USD 5 billion within five years.
- New Zealand is also a member of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), of which India is not a party — this FTA provides India preferential access independent of CPTPP.
- Phased tariff reductions (3–10 years) apply on New Zealand's petroleum oil, malt extract, and machinery exports.
Connection to this news: The agreement aligns with India's Indo-Pacific Economic Framework engagement and its strategy of bilateral trade deals to reduce dependence on any single market while expanding export opportunities for labour-intensive sectors.
Make in India and Sectoral Export Opportunities
"Make in India" was launched in September 2014 to transform India into a global manufacturing hub by attracting investment, encouraging innovation, and developing world-class infrastructure. Key sectors targeted include electronics, defence, textiles, pharmaceuticals, and engineering goods. The New Zealand FTA's duty-free access for leather, footwear, textiles, and gems and jewellery directly supports Make in India's export-push dimension.
- Agra's leather and footwear cluster (one of India's largest) gains duty-free access to the New Zealand market.
- A "Agra: World Capital of Footwear" brand campaign was launched alongside the FTA signing.
- AYUSH systems (Ayurveda, Yoga, Unani, Siddha, Homeopathy) gain New Zealand market recognition — the first time New Zealand has included a dedicated Traditional Medicine chapter in a trade agreement.
- 29.97% of Indian tariff lines are excluded (dairy, animal products except sheep meat, sugar, oils, arms, copper, aluminium).
Connection to this news: The FTA converts the Make in India aspiration into binding tariff commitments by a developed-country partner, providing Indian manufacturers a guaranteed duty-free export window.
Bilateral Safeguard Mechanism in Trade Agreements
A bilateral safeguard mechanism allows a country to temporarily suspend or re-impose tariff concessions if a surge in imports from the FTA partner causes or threatens serious injury to a domestic industry. It is distinct from WTO global safeguards (under the Agreement on Safeguards) and anti-dumping measures, as it targets partner-specific import surges.
- The India–New Zealand FTA includes a bilateral safeguard mechanism in addition to affirming WTO commitments on anti-dumping and countervailing duties.
- Safeguard actions are time-limited and must be progressively liberalised once the injury threat passes.
- India's exclusion of dairy (New Zealand's largest export sector) reduces the likelihood of safeguard invocations in that sensitive area.
Connection to this news: India's negotiating posture — full dairy exclusion combined with a safeguard mechanism — protects domestic farmers while offering New Zealand broad concessions in non-sensitive sectors.
Key Facts & Data
- FTA signed: April 27, 2026 (nine months of negotiations)
- New Zealand tariff elimination: 100% of tariff lines (all 8,284 lines) for Indian exports — immediate upon entry into force
- India tariff concessions: 70% liberalisation covering 95% of bilateral trade value; 29.97% of tariff lines excluded
- Bilateral trade target: USD 5 billion within 5 years (from ~USD 2.4 billion currently)
- Investment commitment: USD 20 billion FDI from New Zealand into India over 15+ years
- Temporary employment visas: 5,000 annually for Indian professionals (3-year stay)
- Services coverage: 118 sectors; 139 sub-sectors with MFN treatment
- Agreement chapters: 20 chapters (first Indian FTA with a dedicated AYUSH/Traditional Medicine chapter)
- Implementation timeline: Requires New Zealand Parliament ratification; expected by end of 2026
- India's FTA legal basis: GATT Article XXIV (derogation from MFN under GATT Article I)
- Key beneficiary sectors (India): Textiles, leather footwear, gems and jewellery, pharmaceuticals, engineering goods, AYUSH
- Key excluded sectors (India's protection): Dairy, sugar, onions, chana, peas, oilseeds, copper, aluminium