【Surat, Gujar】India: Export Industries Rattled by US Tariffs

Editor’s Note

This article examines the human impact of global trade tensions, focusing on India’s diamond industry in Surat. As U.S. tariffs threaten key sectors, workers like veteran polisher Jagdish Prajapati face an uncertain future, illustrating the potential for widespread job losses.

Job Losses Loom

Key sectors of India’s economy are facing economic difficulties due to a further increase in US tariffs. Widespread job losses could be the consequence.

Jagdish Prajapati sits in the grimy Sarthana alley in Surat, polishing a rough diamond. The city of millions in the western Indian state of Gujarat is considered the world’s largest center for diamond processing. Prajapati – in the business for 20 years – is now worried like many of his colleagues in the old city:

“We have been struggling with an economic slump for years, which is due to the war between Russia and Ukraine,” says the 49-year-old. “The burden now from high US tariffs on Indian diamond, gemstone, and jewelry exports has fueled further fears.”

On August 27, additional US punitive tariffs of 25 percent on Indian textiles, auto parts, shoes, and pharmaceutical exports – and indeed also on gemstones – are set to take effect. Added to the existing tariffs, this will result in an effective tariff rate of 50 percent. India must now, along with Brazil, bear the highest tariff rate for exports to the USA to date.

This also affects the diamond city of Surat.

“Many workshops have introduced short-time work,” says Prajapati in an interview with DW. “No one is hiring new people anyway. When the tariffs take effect, many families will have difficulties making ends meet.”

According to the industry union “Diamond Workers Union Gujarat,” 800,000 to one million polishing craftsmen are employed in around 6,000 diamond polishing workshops. Most of them do not have a permanent employment contract with the employer and are only used as needed.

The USA is the largest single market for diamonds processed in India. Gemstones worth over ten billion US dollars are exported to the USA annually. This accounts for almost 30 percent of global diamond trade, says Kirit Bhansali, Chairman of the Gem & Jewellery Export Promotion Council, a lobbying organization.

“The consequences of a blanket tariff of this magnitude are devastating for the sector,” says Bhansali.
USA Increases Pressure on India

Almost every second polished diamond from India goes to the USA.

“With the revised tariff increase, the entire industry could come to a standstill,” fears Bhansali. “This would exert immense pressure on all parts of the value chain: from the individual polisher to large workshops.”

India has to pay such high punitive tariffs for exports to the USA because the most populous emerging country is under criticism for importing Russian crude oil at favorable prices. India intends to cover the immense energy demand in the country this way. Russia is currently the largest single exporter of oil to India.

For Washington, however, such energy deals are an indirect financing of the Russian war of aggression against Ukraine. The West has, in response to this internationally illegal war of aggression, collectively sanctioned Russian energy products.

Just in February, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump met at the White House shortly after the latter’s inauguration to discuss trade issues. They agreed to double bilateral trade to 500 billion US dollars by 2030.

However, the pressure from Trump on India to stop its oil imports from Russia and to comply with sanctions against Iran has severely strained relations between Washington and New Delhi.

Uncertainty Also in the Textile Industry

In the Tiruppur district in the southern state of Tamil Nadu, more than a million people work in the textile industry and related trades. The region is known worldwide as a location for the cotton industry, with numerous knitting mills, bleaching plants, and other workshops. Zippers and buttons are also manufactured there. As business has been good so far, the city’s population has constantly grown.

About 30 percent of exports from Tiruppur go to the USA, particularly in the area of cotton and knitwear. According to export associations, exports to the USA reached a volume of 5.1 billion US dollars in the last fiscal year 2024.

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⏰ Published on: August 11, 2025