The Trans-Pacific Partnership may adversely affect Indian textile and garment exports to the US. Exporters from TPP member countries will get preferential access to the US market while non-members like India will lose out. The US imported about $82 billion worth of apparels in 2015 of which India supplied about $3.7 billion. This accounted for 21.5 per cent of total apparel exports from India, down from 23 per cent in 2014. If the duty turns disadvantageous for India's apparel exports, the share is likely to fall substantially.
TPP has a rule that makes it mandatory for a partner country that makes clothes to source yarn, fabrics and other inputs from another partner country. Only then will the manufacturing country get duty preference. This rule means garment manufacturers in TPP countries have to source their raw materials among themselves even if suppliers from that region are not the most efficient.
So India’s exports of apparel to TPP countries like the US will go down since buyers would like to procure from TPP-based vendors. The Trans-Pacific Partnership is a free trade agreement between 12 countries of the Pacific rim including Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Canada, Chile, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United States of America, Japan and Vietnam.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
$120 Crude, Zero Margin: How India’s textile hubs are paying the price
For India’s textile clusters, the current West Asia crisis is no longer a distant geopolitical headline. In Surat’s polyester corridors... Read more
Luxury under pressure as stagflation and geopolitics redefine the winners’ circl…
The 2025 earnings for Europe’s listed luxury majors have delivered a verdict that has far more implications than the prevailing... Read more
Luxury resale goes global, sneakers, handbags, archival fashion redrawing border…
The luxury resale market in 2026 is no longer a monolithic global block. According to the RB Insights January 2026... Read more
China out but can India deliver? The realities of the global sourcing shift
With the US imposing a flat 15 per cent tariff on Chinese imports under Section 122 as of February 2026,... Read more
Luxury in Retreat: Why the aspirational consumer is gone for good
The global luxury industry is confronting an unprecedented situation. The active consumer base, which peaked at 400 million in 2022,... Read more
The Invisible Bleed: How a single chemical is slowing India’s apparel machine
The global fashion industry has spent the better part of the past two years obsessing over visible disruptions viz. volatile... Read more
The Closet Paradox: How ‘nothing to wear’ is driving global overconsumption
In an era of overflowing wardrobes and instant fashion gratification, a striking paradox has emerged: the more clothes we own,... Read more
US trade rulings and labor slowdown reshape 2026 cotton supply chains
The global cotton industry is entering a period of adjustment, shaped by legal rulings, trade policy recalibrations, and a softening... Read more
Zero-tariff paradigm drives strategic re-sourcing at Global Sourcing Expo 2026
Projected to reach a valuation of $30.3 billion this year, the Australian textile and apparel market is entering a period... Read more
Strategic manufacturing takes center stage at Gartex Texprocess Mumbai 2026
A $179 billion industrial cornerstone contributing 2 per cent to the national GDP, the Indian textile and apparel sector is... Read more












