Saturday, August 9, 2025

Why Modi’s “standing with farmers” rhetoric misses the mark: The real sectors taking the hit

 

Why Modi’s “standing with farmers” rhetoric misses the mark: The real sectors taking the hit

Modi’s emphasis on protecting farmers from US tariffs is politically savvy but economically misleading — agriculture represents only ~6% of India’s $79 billion exports to the US, while far larger non-agricultural sectors are bearing the brunt of Trump’s tariffs.

The sectors actually getting hammered (far bigger than agriculture):

Electronics/IT Hardware: $12.3 billion (largest single category)

  • Smartphones, semiconductors, IT equipment
  • Employs millions in urban manufacturing hubs
  • Currently exempted but vulnerable to policy shifts

Gems & Jewelry: $9.15 billion

  • Cut diamonds, precious stones, gold jewelry
  • Faces 52% total tariff, among the highest
  • 30% of sector’s global sales go to US
  • Heavily concentrated in Gujarat, Mumbai

Pharmaceuticals: $8.7 billion

  • Generic drugs, APIs, formulations
  • Currently exempted due to US healthcare dependence
  • Employs educated middle-class workforce

Machinery/Engineering: $6.48 billion

  • Auto components, industrial equipment
  • 65%+ US market dependency in some sub-sectors
  • Major employer in manufacturing states

Textiles/Apparel: $2.9 billion

  • Faces 59–64% total tariffs (highest of all sectors)
  • Labor-intensive but much smaller than other hit sectors
  • Already declining before tariffs

Why the farmer rhetoric is misleading:

Agricultural exports to US: ~$4–5 billion (including marine products)

  • Rice, spices, marine products make up bulk
  • Many agricultural items already duty-free or low-tariff
  • Sector employs many but contributes relatively small export value

The real impact hierarchy:

  1. Urban manufacturing workers (electronics, pharma, engineering) — highest skilled, highest paid
  2. Diamond/jewelry artisans (Gujarat/Mumbai) — traditional but high-value
  3. Textile workers (Tamil Nadu, Karnataka) — labor-intensive but smaller scale
  4. Farmers/fishermen — large numbers but smaller dollar impact

Political calculation behind farmer focus:

  • Vote bank arithmetic: Farmers are 40%+ of workforce vs. industrial workers ~25%
  • Emotional resonance: “Annadata” (food provider) narrative plays better than “export manufacturer”
  • Deflection strategy: Easier to blame external tariffs than address domestic industrial competitiveness
  • State politics: Key agricultural states (UP, Punjab, Haryana) more electorally critical than industrial centers

What Modi isn’t saying:

The real economic damage is to India’s high-value manufacturing and services sectors that employ educated urban workers, generate higher per-capita income, and drive technology transfer — precisely the sectors needed for India’s “developed nation” aspirations.

Bottom line: Modi’s farmer-centric messaging obscures that urban industrial workers in electronics, pharma, gems, and engineering — not farmers — are taking the biggest economic hit from US tariffs. It’s classic political theater: appeal to the numerically larger but economically smaller constituency while the higher-value sectors suffer quietly.

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