As of January 1, 2026, a quiet but transformative shift has taken place in India’s external economic engagement: every Indian product entering Australia now does so at zero tariff. Three years after the Australia-India Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement came into force, Australia has eliminated duties on 100% of Indian exports. In a global environment increasingly shaped by trade barriers, economic nationalism and geopolitical friction, this outcome stands out as a rare and consequential success.
What ECTA has delivered in concrete terms
The most striking achievement of ECTA is its comprehensiveness on the Australian side. Tariffs have been removed across the entire spectrum of Indian goods exports — from textiles, garments and leather to engineering goods, automobiles, pharmaceuticals, gems and jewellery, agricultural produce and processed foods. There are no carve-outs or sectoral exclusions.
India, in return, has progressively reduced or eliminated duties on a carefully calibrated basket of Australian exports. These include coal, critical minerals, metals, wool, wine and selected agricultural products. The agreement thus reflects a balanced exchange rather than one-sided liberalisation, respecting sensitivities while expanding opportunity.
Trade numbers that validate the strategy
The results are visible in trade data. Bilateral trade between India and Australia has crossed AUD 50 billion (around ₹3 lakh crore) for the first time. Over the last five years, two-way goods trade has doubled.
What is particularly notable is the pace of India’s export growth. While India’s overall goods exports rose by roughly 40% in this period, exports to Australia surged by nearly 200%. This divergence suggests that tariff elimination has not merely shifted existing trade, but unlocked new demand and deeper integration in the Australian market.
The logic of complementarity
ECTA’s success is rooted in structural economic complementarity. Australia is rich in resources that India increasingly needs for its development trajectory — energy, coal, lithium, rare earths and other critical minerals essential for manufacturing, electric mobility and clean-energy transitions. It also offers advanced skilling and technical expertise.
India, on the other hand, supplies competitively priced manufactured goods, pharmaceuticals, automobiles, machinery, textiles and food products — sectors where Australia has limited domestic production but strong consumer demand. Indian products are no longer confined to diaspora niches; they are becoming mainstream across Australian cities.
This complementarity reduces political resistance to trade and makes the partnership more resilient to shocks.
Employment, confidence and political signalling
Trade under ECTA is translating into jobs and confidence on both sides. In Australia, where nearly one in four jobs is linked to trade, an estimated 200,000 jobs are now associated with commerce with India. In India, Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal had projected the creation of one million jobs as a result of ECTA — a target that no longer appears aspirational given current trade momentum.
Beyond employment, ECTA has generated political confidence. Both governments increasingly describe the partnership as a stabilising economic anchor in the Indo-Pacific, signalling predictability to businesses at a time when global trade rules appear increasingly fragile.
Significance in a fragmented global trade order
ECTA’s importance is magnified by timing. The global trading system is under strain from protectionist policies, supply-chain weaponisation and tariff wars among major economies. Against this backdrop, Australia’s decision to offer India complete tariff-free access is strategically significant.