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regular-article-logo Wednesday, 03 June 2026

US slashes equipment tariffs to 15%, but limited benefits for India: Think tank GTRI

While exporters of engineering goods, HVAC equipment and agricultural machinery may gain from the reduced 15 per cent tariff, and some manufacturers could potentially qualify for the new 10 per cent rate by using US-origin metals, the overall impact is likely to be modest, the body said

PTI Published 03.06.26, 12:24 AM
A graphic of US and India as chess pieces on a chessboard

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The US administration has announced a reduction in tariffs on selected industrial and agricultural equipment containing steel, aluminium or copper from 25 per cent to 15 per cent, think tank GTRI said on Tuesday.

For India, the changes offer limited benefits, it said.

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While exporters of engineering goods, HVAC equipment, electrical equipment and agricultural machinery may gain from the reduced 15 per cent tariff, and some manufacturers could potentially qualify for the new 10 per cent rate by using US-origin metals, the overall impact is likely to be modest, the Global Trade Research Initiative Founder Ajay Srivastava said.

The lower rate will apply from June 8, 2026, through December 31, 2027.

Products covered include heating and air-conditioning equipment, bulldozers, forklifts, harvesters, agricultural machinery and certain electrical grid equipment.

A new 10 per cent tariff category has been introduced for imported products manufactured using at least 85 per cent U.S.-origin steel, aluminium or copper by weight, it said.

Products containing 15 per cent or less steel, aluminium or copper by weight will continue to remain exempt from Section 232 tariffs.

However, the core metal tariffs remain unchanged. Most imported steel, aluminium and copper articles will continue to face a 50 per cent tariff, while many downstream and derivative products made from these metals will remain subject to a 25 per cent duty, he said.

India imported about USD 2.9 billion worth of steel, aluminium, copper and related products from the United States in FY2026, creating some opportunity for Indian manufacturers to use U.S.-origin inputs and qualify for the lower tariff when exporting finished products back to the US.

"However, the core issue remains unchanged: Indian exports of steel, aluminium and copper products continue to face the punitive 50 per cent Section 232 tariffs, while many downstream metal products remain subject to a 25 per cent duty," he added.

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