Skip to main content

Advocacy group flags uneven export gains as new trade pact announced

By A Representative 
The Centre for Financial Accountability (CFA) has cautioned that India’s latest free trade agreement risks widening regional inequality, arguing that export growth remains concentrated in a small number of states despite rising national figures.
In a statement titled Free Trade, Unequal India, CFA said the commerce ministry’s celebration of new trade deals “hides a deeper worry,” pointing to Reserve Bank of India data that reveals a widening geographic divide.
“A handful of states now drive almost all exports. Maharashtra, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Uttar Pradesh together control nearly 70 per cent of India’s export basket. This level of concentration is not healthy. It tells us growth is clustering fast and leaving most of the country behind,” the note said.
According to CFA, more than 90 per cent of India’s exports originate from just ten states, leaving the remaining twenty “fighting over scraps.” The organisation highlighted sharp gains in Gujarat, supported by ports, industrial corridors, and long-standing manufacturing ecosystems that attract both private and public investment.
CFA argued that this spatial concentration is reinforced by financial flows. “Money deposited in Bihar or eastern Uttar Pradesh is lent to factories on the coast. Labour migrates. Capital migrates. Goods flow back in. This is not integration. It is dependence,” it stated, adding that high credit-deposit ratios in coastal states contrast with capital outflows from the hinterland.
The group warned that free trade agreements, without accompanying domestic investment, could entrench the divide. “More exports from the same few states will only harden the divide... India risks becoming two economies in one country — a coastal exporter and a stranded hinterland.”
CFA called for long-term public spending, stronger state-level industrial capacity, and banking reforms to ensure credit reaches regions that currently supply labour and savings but lack local industry.

Comments

TRENDING

Manufacturing, services: India's low-skill, middle-skill labour remains underemployed

By Francis Kuriakose* The Indian economy was in a state of deceleration well before Covid-19 made its impact in early 2020. This can be inferred from the declining trends of four important macroeconomic variables that indicate the health of the economy in the last quarter of 2019.

The soundtrack of resistance: How 'Sada Sada Ya Nabi' is fueling the Iran war

​ By Syed Ali Mujtaba*  ​The Persian track “ Sada Sada Ya Nabi ye ” by Hossein Sotoodeh has taken the world by storm. This viral media has cut across linguistic barriers to achieve cult status, reaching over 10 million views. The electrifying music and passionate rendition by the Iranian singer have resonated across the globe, particularly as the high-intensity military conflict involving Iran entered its second month in March 2026.

Incarceration of Prof Saibaba 'revives' the question: What is crime, who is criminal?

By Kunal Pant* In 2016, a Supreme Court Judge asked the state of Maharashtra, “Do you want to extract a pound of flesh?” The statement was directed against the state for contesting the bail plea of Delhi University Professor GN Saibaba. Saibaba was arrested in 2014, a justification for which was to prevent him from committing what the police called “anti-national activities.”