Try GOLD - Free
Trump and India call off trade war
Bangkok Post
|February 04, 2026
Officials and business leaders breathe a sigh of relief over lower tariffs, but the terms of peace are murky, writes Alex Travelli from Seoul
-
Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India visited the White House last February, before relations between the countries soured.
(NYT)
The economic war the Trump administration unleashed against India last summer came to an abrupt end Monday with a pair of social media posts from President Donald Trump and then Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. What had begun as a dispute about trade and tariffs, and then escalated to include the Ukraine war, visas and more, was declared over.
Trump was first to share the news: “Our amazing relationship with India will be even stronger” and “the United States will charge a reduced Reciprocal Tariff, lowering it from 25% to 18%.”
In fact, most Indian goods have faced a 50% tariff — not 25% — since Aug 6, when Trump said the country should be punished for buying oil from Russia. That doubled a tariff that was already set higher than those burdening India’s competitors in Asia.
Mr Modi posted soon after, confirming that the two leaders had spoken, praising Trump personally as a peacemaker and saying the deal “unlocks immense opportunities” for both sides.
But aside from the new 18% tariff rate, all other aspects of the deal, as laid out in Trump’s post, leave enormous questions to be answered. Trump wrote that the new rate would be “effective immediately,” without much elaboration. Key terms remained murky, including Trump's claim that India agreed to spend $500 billion in the United States, something the Indian side did not immediately mention.
The announcements were greeted, initially at least, with a collective sigh of relief. Stocks in Asia jumped yesterday with shares in India rising nearly 3%.
This story is from the February 04, 2026 edition of Bangkok Post.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
Asian stocks dither, oil rises amid truce doubts
Asian share markets were in a sober mood yesterday as cracks began to appear in the fragile Gulf truce, nudging oil prices back up and reminding investors the inflationary fallout would last a long time yet.
2 mins
April 10, 2026
Bangkok Post
Meta unveils ‘Muse Spark’ AI model
Performs better, but lags behind in coding
3 mins
April 10, 2026
Bangkok Post
DeepSeek release to test China's AI efforts
Speculation rife on which chip it will use
3 mins
April 10, 2026
Bangkok Post
OKC rule West! Holmgren, Shai fire champs
San Antonio surge, Nuggets keep heat on
2 mins
April 10, 2026
Bangkok Post
Fake coconut water alert after factories inspected
The Ombudsman has called for an accelerated crackdown on the production of fake coconut water, following the arrest of operators at two processing facilities in Samut Songkhram province.
1 mins
April 10, 2026
Bangkok Post
Statue marks 'enduring' Mongolia ties
Two stainless-steel stallions symbolising the enduring friendship between Thailand and Mongolia have been unveiled at Benchakitti Park in Klong Toey district.
1 min
April 10, 2026
Bangkok Post
MPs grill govt on fuel plan
The energy crisis and soaring fuel prices — particularly the issue of refining margins — dominated parliamentary debate during a joint sitting in parliament yesterday, as opposition parties challenged the government's policy statement.
1 mins
April 10, 2026
Bangkok Post
Illegal vapes use 'Made in USA' label to skirt tariffs, crackdown
The US vaping market, long dominated by Chinese imports, is seeing an uptick of “Made in America” products, in what some analysts and industry executives say is a reaction to the Trump administration's crackdown on unlicensed brands.
3 mins
April 10, 2026
Bangkok Post
N Korea holds three days of weapons testing
Ballistic missiles, cluster bombs fired
2 mins
April 10, 2026
Bangkok Post
Millions vote in state elections
Millions of Indians queued to vote in local elections in two states yesterday, kicking off four key contests this month amid a war in the Middle East that has triggered some fuel shortages, even though Prime Minister Narendra Modi has kept domestic prices in check.
1 mins
April 10, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
