US refuses to send trade team to India, halting the next round of talks even as Washington announced a 50% tariff on Indian goods.
According to officials, 25% has already taken effect, while another 25% could follow depending on how geopolitical events unfold.
US refuses to send trade team to India as talks pause and duties rise
The cancelled visit was due in the second half of August.
It would have followed negotiations that began in February after PM Narendra Modi’s trip to the United States.
With the pause, there is no date for the talks to resume.
The tariff plan is the toughest the US has announced on any country.
It raises costs for Indian exporters and adds uncertainty for American buyers who were counting on a limited deal to ease duties.
New Delhi has not announced countermeasures.
Trade officials are weighing exposure across sectors where price sensitivity is high.
Companies are reviewing contracts, shipping schedules and payment terms as the new duty environment takes hold.
For Pakistan, the signal is clear. Buyers in the US who need alternative sourcing may look to diversify.
Pakistani firms in textiles, leather, sports goods and IT enabled services could see openings.
If they can meet quality, compliance and delivery timelines.
Logistics will matter. Exporters who can offer predictable lead times, stable pricing and fast documentation may benefit first.
Energy reliability, customs facilitation and quick refunds will decide whether interest turns into repeat orders.
For now, the immediate headline is unchanged: US refuses to send trade team to India and talks are on hold.
The next steps will depend on whether Washington and New Delhi set a new schedule and whether the remaining 25% tariff is imposed.
