Editor’s Note
This article highlights the significant economic pressures facing India’s diamond industry, as new U.S. tariffs threaten a key export market and the livelihoods of thousands of workers in Surat, the world’s largest diamond polishing hub.

SURAT, India, April 4 (Reuters) – A wave of anxiety has gripped India’s diamond polishing hub of Surat, as hefty U.S. tariffs threaten to undermine the country’s gem and jewellery exports, putting at risk the livelihoods of thousands of workers.
The United States, which takes more than 30% of the South Asian nation’s gem and jewellery exports, set a 27% reciprocal tariff on it on Thursday, at a time when demand is softening in other key markets such as China, the Middle East, and Europe.
Surat, the second-largest city in Gujarat, the western home state of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, processes and polishes more than 80% of the world’s rough diamonds, and India accounts for nine in every 10 diamonds processed globally.
Business has ground to a halt in its teeming diamond market, where more than 10,000 traders and brokers gather each day, as the industry tries to figure out how matters will evolve in the coming months.

The United States accounted for nearly $10 billion, or 30.4%, of India’s annual gems and jewellery exports, totalling $32 billion in the fiscal year 2023/24.
Gems and jewellery are India’s third largest export to the United States, after engineering and electronic goods, and employ millions of workers, including artisans.

The industry will seek alternative markets to compensate for the loss of U.S. demand, but no other country will be able to replace the U.S. market, diamond dealers said.
An uncertain future lies ahead for Chetan Navadiya, a diamond manufacturer turned job-work contractor.
