NEW DELHI: When Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal told a global audience that India “wants to be a part of the developed world” and seeks partnerships that are “enduring, sustainable, and win-win,” it was not mere rhetoric for the domestic stage. It was a signal that India is positioning itself to move from the margins of global trade rule-making to the center, redefining how commerce and cooperation can be built in an era of fractured globalization.
The evidence of this ambition is steadily taking shape. India has concluded trade agreements with Australia, the UK, Chile, and Peru. Negotiations with the European Union are on a fast track, with both sides expecting closure soon. A deal with Oman is also nearing finalization, while exploratory talks with the United States suggest that a bilateral framework, once elusive, could be back on the table. These arrangements are not symbolic; together, they promise over $100 billion in investment across manufacturing, innovation, and services over the next fifteen years embedding India more deeply into global supply chains and securing new platforms for long-term growth.
Mr. Goyal framed this pursuit in strategic terms: “In today’s world, resilience in our supply chains, our ability to navigate uncertainty and volatility, and to prepare for a future built on partnerships, collaborations, and cooperation among like-minded nations will define our success story.” His emphasis on resilience reflects a broader consensus that in the 21st century, adaptability, diversification, and trust matter as much as tariff cuts or market access.
This view was echoed and sharpened by global leaders at the FICCI LEADS 2025 dialogue. Oman’s Pankaj Khimji, Adviser for Foreign Trade and International Cooperation, reminded participants that “tariffs, duties, excise are not the real barriers. Non-tariff barriers are the real barriers—standards, specifications, exemptions. We need to be mindful of those NTBs as we are of tariff barriers.” His words cut to the heart of India’s challenge: aligning domestic rules with international norms in areas like pharmaceuticals, digital trade, and green technologies will determine whether the country can truly convert its demographic advantage into sustained global leadership.
From Paris, John W.H. Denton, Secretary General of the International Chamber of Commerce, insisted that progress does not hinge solely on WTO reform but on practical collaboration: “Chambers of commerce, governments, and businesses must collaborate closely to cut unnecessary trade costs and empower MSMEs. These steps do not require WTO reform; they require determination and the right systems to be put into practice.” His intervention underscored that the strength of India’s trade architecture will be tested not only by its ability to sign large agreements but also by how well it enables its millions of small and medium enterprises to thrive globally.
The perspective from London was equally revealing. Richard Heald, Chair of the UK India Business Council, called the UK–India corridor “a model for resilience,” pointing to complementarities between India’s demographic energy and the UK’s research and innovation strengths. He argued that partnerships in clean energy, education, and digital services can set global benchmarks, signaling that India’s trade agenda is increasingly about shaping standards rather than merely expanding markets.
Other leaders reinforced the momentum. Francisco Cervantes Diaz, President of Mexico’s Business Coordination Council, noted that Indo-Mexican trade “continues to gain relevance” and highlighted strong complementarities ripe for expansion. H.E. Philip Green OAM, Australia’s High Commissioner to India, and Ashok Rajani of BCG also weighed in, stressing the importance of resilience, adaptability, and trust in framing future cooperation.
Taken together, these voices point to a world where India’s trajectory is compared with its two most important benchmarks China and the United States. China, long the global factory floor, has increasingly turned defensive, relying on non-tariff measures and state-driven models that erode trust with key partners. The United States, under Donald Trump’s renewed tariffs, has weaponized trade as leverage but at the cost of domestic consumers and global stability. India, in contrast, offers a third way: inclusivity, partnership-building, and regulatory alignment that resonate with both the Global South and developed economies alike.
The ambition to join the developed world is bold, but it is not just about catching up. It is about redefining the architecture of global commerce itself showing that integration can be achieved without erasing sovereignty, that trade can be made resilient without resorting to protectionism, and that credibility and trust can matter as much as scale. If India can shift from being a reactive participant to an agenda-setter, the effect will ripple far beyond its borders. For emerging economies, it will be proof that partnership with the global system is possible on equal terms. For developed nations, it will signal that India is not just a large market but a stabilizing anchor in uncertain times.
In an era when Washington’s protectionism and Beijing’s defensiveness are unsettling global markets, India has the rare opportunity to chart a new path. If New Delhi can seize it, the world will not merely welcome India among the developed nations, it will celebrate it as the voice that redefines how global trade is done!
– Dr. Shahid Siddiqui; follow via X @shahidsiddiqui
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