Synopsis: ​Services and capital goods emerge as growth anchors in Q1 FY26, while the automotive sector eyes a pivot from motorcycles to the $2.2 trillion global passenger vehicle market.

 

New Delhi: India’s trade landscape is undergoing a profound structural reorientation. According to the latest ‘Trade Watch Quarterly’ released by NITI Aayog for the April-June (Q1) FY26 period, the nation is successfully pivoting toward technology-intensive and capital-goods segments, even as traditional labor-intensive exports face global headwinds.

NITI Aayog report flags high-tech resilience amid merchandise cooling
Source: Internet

​While overall merchandise exports saw a marginal decline of 2.1% due to softened global demand, the services sector continued to act as a robust stabilizer. Services exports climbed 10% during the quarter, providing a critical buffer to the trade deficit.

​A key highlight of the report is the thematic deep-dive into India’s automotive sector—a $2.2 trillion global opportunity. While India has established itself as a formidable player in the motorcycle segment with a 9% global export share, it remains an underdog in the passenger vehicle (PV) market.

​”The asymmetry is stark,” the report notes. Passenger vehicles account for 71% of global automotive demand, yet India’s capture remains at a stagnant 1%. To bridge this gap, NITI Aayog suggests a shift from “protection toward lower input tariffs” and deeper integration into Global Value Chains (GVCs), which have already seen India’s backward integration rise from 32% in 2015 to 46% in 2024.

​Beyond hardware, India is cementing its status as a “global powerhouse” in the creative economy. The report emphasizes that India’s strength now lies in digitally delivered, skill-intensive services—such as software, R&D, and digital content—whose export value has significantly outpaced creative goods.

​On the import side, the reorientation toward electronics, machinery, and chemicals signals that Indian manufacturers are upgrading their capabilities and embedding themselves more firmly in international production networks.

​Despite the resilience, industry stakeholders flagged several “structural constraints” during consultations.

These include:

​Incentive Gaps: Current RoDTEP rates are seen as insufficient to offset high logistics costs.

​EV Hurdles: While EV exports are growing, India remains heavily dependent on imports for critical battery components like lithium and cobalt.

​Counterfeit Risks: Nearly 20-25% of the automotive parts market is estimated to consist of fake products, affecting brand reputation in foreign markets.

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