In her address at the World Economic Forum in Davos, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen described the impending EU-India Free Trade Agreement (FTA) as the “mother of all deals.” She stated: “We are on the cusp of a historic trade agreement.
Some call it the mother of all deals. One that would create a market of 2 billion people, accounting for almost a quarter of global GDP.” This characterization reflects the agreement’s scale: combining the European Union’s population of approximately 450 million with India’s 1.44 billion would form one of the world’s largest integrated markets, representing roughly 24-25% of global GDP based on current IMF projections (EU ~$20 trillion nominal GDP; India ~$4-4.5 trillion in 2025-26 estimates).
Negotiations, relaunched in 2022 after stalling in 2013, have accelerated amid geopolitical shifts, including U.S. tariff uncertainties under evolving policies. As of January 2026, multiple sources, including Reuters, BBC, and official statements, indicate the deal is nearing conclusion. An announcement of concluded negotiations is expected imminently, potentially formalized at the India-EU summit in New Delhi around January 27, 2026. The pact encompasses tariff reductions on goods, services liberalization, investment protection, geographical indications, public procurement access, and enforceable sustainability chapters on labor, environment, and climate.
The EU stands as India’s largest trading partner bloc, while India ranks as the EU’s 9th largest overall. Bilateral merchandise trade reached €120 billion (~$140 billion) in 2024, per European Commission data, equivalent to 11.5% of India’s total external trade. Indian fiscal year 2024-25 figures show bilateral goods trade at approximately $136-136.53 billion, with India’s exports to the EU at $75.85-76 billion and imports from the EU at $59-60.68 billion (sources: Ministry of Commerce India, PIB, Reuters).
Key Indian exports to the EU include:
EU exports to India dominate in:
Services trade has grown rapidly, totaling over €66 billion in 2024 (EU imports ~€37 billion, exports ~€29 billion), more than double the €30.4 billion in 2020. A significant portion involves IT, business process outsourcing, and financial services, where India holds a surplus.
Over the past decade, goods trade has expanded by nearly 90%, while services have more than doubled, underscoring untapped potential constrained by average applied tariffs (EU on Indian goods ~3.8% overall, but higher in labor-intensive sectors; Indian tariffs on EU goods often 10-20%+ in automobiles, wines, and machinery).
Independent studies and post-negotiation projections highlight substantial gains. A 2020 European Parliament-commissioned study (updated scenarios) estimated that a comprehensive FTA could boost EU exports to India by 20-60% in optimistic models, with merchandise exports potentially reaching €112.5 billion by 2032 (a 107.6% increase from baseline levels, per International Economics Consulting analysis). Indian exports to the EU could see similar proportional gains, particularly in value-added sectors.
Bilateral merchandise trade is forecasted to climb toward $250 billion by 2030-31 in optimistic scenarios, from the current ~$136 billion. Combined goods and services trade could exceed $300 billion annually within a decade post-implementation.
Macro-level effects include:
Sector-specific data:
Beyond pure economics, the FTA aligns with de-risking strategies. The EU seeks diversification from over-reliance on certain Asian suppliers, while India pursues “China+1” manufacturing shifts and reduced dependence on single markets. In a fragmented global trade environment, with potential U.S. tariff escalations, the deal provides resilience. It covers sustainable development with binding commitments, supporting EU Green Deal goals (e.g., carbon border adjustments) and India’s net-zero ambitions by 2070.
Challenges remain: India seeks safeguards for agriculture (dairy, poultry) and sensitive sectors, while the EU prioritizes strong IP enforcement and labor standards. Balanced outcomes are emphasized in recent rounds.
In quantitative terms, the agreement could elevate bilateral ties from a €120-140 billion goods/services baseline to a multi-hundred-billion-dollar partnership, fostering supply chain integration in strategic sectors like semiconductors, renewables, and digital tech.
Ursula von der Leyen’s “mother of all deals” framing captures this transformative potential: not merely incremental trade growth, but a strategic economic bridge between two major democracies representing nearly a quarter of humanity and global output. As negotiations conclude in early 2026, implementation will test whether these projections materialize, delivering mutual prosperity in an uncertain world.
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