Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s scheduled visit to the United Kingdom from July 23–24, 2025, marks a momentous juncture in the evolving trajectory of India–UK relations. The centrepiece of the visit—the formal signing of the long-awaited India–UK Free Trade Agreement (FTA)—is emblematic of a broader strategic, economic, and diplomatic realignment in an increasingly complex and fragmented global order. Since the post-Brexit recalibration of UK foreign policy and the announcement of the UK–India Comprehensive Strategic Partnership under the Roadmap 2030, both countries have sought to reinvigorate ties. Earlier efforts, such as Boris Johnson’s postponed 2021 visit and the missed Diwali 2022 FTA deadline, underscored the political sensitivities and negotiation hurdles involved. Now, with the agreement finally materializing, the convergence between New Delhi and London holds deep promise—anchored in shared democratic values, economic complementarity, historical ties, and urgent geopolitical imperatives. As India rises as the acknowledged leader of the Global South, the UK seeks renewed purpose and enduring partnerships on the global stage.
From Colonial Shadows to Contemporary Strategic Convergence
India and the UK, long intertwined through history, transitioned from a post-imperial relationship to one rooted in mutual respect and pragmatic cooperation. Since the formalization of a Strategic Partnership in 2004, successive governments have attempted to reinvigorate bilateral ties through education, defence, climate change, and diaspora engagements. The upcoming FTA, finalised in May 2025, promises to take this engagement to a strategic level commensurate with the two nations’ global aspirations.
The Economic Game-Changer: FTA and Its Impacts
Research suggests the FTA could boost bilateral trade by £25.5 billion annually by 2040 and increase the UK’s GDP by £4.8 billion. The deal eliminates tariffs on 99% of Indian exports to the UK, especially benefiting labour-intensive sectors such as textiles, IT services, automotive components, and pharmaceuticals. Tariffs on Scotch whisky will be halved from 150% to 75% immediately, with a phased reduction to 40% over ten years, while automotive tariffs will reduce from over 100% to 10% under a quota system.
The FTA also includes transformative labour mobility provisions. The Double Contributions Convention exempts Indian professionals posted in the UK for up to three years from National Insurance contributions. This covers 36 contractual service sectors and 16 independent professions—including chefs, yoga instructors, IT experts, and artists—enhancing India’s soft power export while fulfilling UK labour market needs.
The education sector, too, benefits. Indian students now represent the second-largest international student community in the UK. Enhanced mutual recognition of degrees and streamlined visa procedures under the FTA are expected to boost this flow.
Strategic and Security Synergies
Beyond trade, the India–UK Technology Security Initiative, launched in 2024, underlines a maturing security architecture between the two powers. Focused on AI, semiconductors, quantum tech, and cybersecurity, it positions India as a pivotal digital democracy and the UK as a global R&D leader. These technological convergences offer an alternative to authoritarian digital ecosystems.
Moreover, shared concerns about grey-zone warfare, terrorism, cyber threats, and maritime security—in the Indo-Pacific and Indian Ocean—bind the two countries. Joint naval exercises and intelligence-sharing initiatives have grown. Incidents like the recent Pahalgam attack underscore the need for deeper counterterrorism cooperation.
India’s Operation Sindoor, a humanitarian evacuation initiative undertaken during recent regional crises, further solidifies its image as a responsible stakeholder, and the UK has increasingly aligned itself with India on such multilateral security endeavours.
Post-Brexit UK and Global Britain’s New Partner
Post-Brexit Britain has pivoted toward non-EU partnerships under its “Global Britain” strategy. With the EU accounting for a diminished share of UK trade, India offers high growth potential, youthful demographics, and expanding digital and green economies. The FTA is the UK’s most consequential bilateral agreement since Brexit and aims to offset the economic headwinds caused by geopolitical volatility, including the Russia–Ukraine war and energy disruptions.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s likely visit to India for the formal ratification of the FTA signals bipartisan consensus in the UK on the importance of India. For Britain, forging stronger ties with India is also an answer to the shifting power dynamics in the Indo-Pacific and its aspiration to remain relevant in an age of Asian resurgence.
India’s Global Leadership and Balancing Strategic Choices
India, in turn, has carefully curated its foreign engagements. As the leader of the Global South and a nation presiding over the G20 in 2023 with diplomatic finesse, India is advancing a multipolar world order. Its economic diplomacy has gained coherence through FTAs with Australia, UAE, and now the UK.
But India walks a tightrope. It seeks deeper access to Western markets while preserving its strategic autonomy. The Russia–Ukraine conflict exemplifies this complexity—India has continued to import Russian energy despite Western pressure, all while advocating for peace, food security, and energy access for the developing world. The India–UK FTA thus becomes a model of “principled multilateralism.”
The US Angle: Reciprocal Tariffs, Transatlantic Risks, and Diplomatic Balancing
Amid these developments, India is negotiating a delicate trade balancing act with the United States. Former President Donald Trump has repeatedly vowed to impose reciprocal tariffs on countries with trade surpluses vis-à-vis the US, placing both India and the UK on alert. Washington has already threatened tariffs as high as 26% on Indian exports over the digital services tax dispute. In response, New Delhi is pursuing a compromise while drawing firm lines on politically sensitive sectors like agriculture and dairy.
However, Trump’s aggressive tariff rhetoric also casts a shadow over UK–US trade relations, especially as Britain deepens its economic ties with India. Should the India–UK FTA lead to diversion of Indian exports away from the US market—particularly in sectors like textiles, pharmaceuticals, and IT—retaliatory actions from Washington could pressure not just India but also the UK, whose own post-Brexit ambitions for a US-UK FTA remain unrealized and vulnerable.
Yet India remains committed to strengthening its economic partnership with the US, aiming to double bilateral trade to $500 billion by 2030. The India–UK FTA thus emerges as a form of strategic hedging, offering both market diversification and a buffer against an increasingly transactional transatlantic trade framework dominated by tariff threats and shifting loyalties.
The Indian Diaspora: A Living Bridge
The over 1.8 million-strong Indian diaspora in the UK is a vital pillar of this relationship. They contribute significantly to the British economy, culture, and political life—members of Parliament, entrepreneurs, and medical professionals alike. The FTA facilitates professional mobility and recognizes Indian qualifications, ensuring that this community continues to flourish and deepen bilateral bonds.
Diaspora-led startups, tech partnerships, and cross-border education also reinforce the “living bridge” narrative, long advocated by diplomats on both sides. By enabling smoother movement of students and professionals, the FTA institutionalizes this bond.
Commonwealth, Shared Values, and Global Responsibility
India’s active role in the Commonwealth and its reputation as a pluralistic democracy bolster its rapport with the UK. Both countries have pledged to uphold human rights, rule of law, and democratic governance in multilateral fora. As the world confronts democratic backsliding and information warfare, the India–UK partnership represents a values-based counterweight.
Challenges and Way Forward
Challenges remain. British manufacturing lobbies fear competition from Indian goods. Indian MSMEs fear getting overwhelmed by UK capital and standards. These concerns need targeted policy cushioning. Mechanisms for regulatory coherence, digital taxation resolution, and dispute redressal must evolve in tandem with tariff cuts.
Nonetheless, the FTA is more than an economic agreement—it’s a strategic affirmation. It acknowledges India’s role as a pivotal player in the emerging world order and Britain’s desire to remain an agile, outward-looking actor.
Conclusion: A New Chapter in a Maturing Relationship
Prime Minister Modi’s visit will be historic—not merely for the economic numbers it generates but for the narrative it reshapes. It signals the maturity of India–UK relations, rooted in economic ambition, security cooperation, technological convergence, and diaspora engagement. In a world fraught with great power rivalry and economic nationalism, this partnership offers a template for pragmatic, resilient, and future-ready cooperation.
As India champions the cause of the Global South and steers global conversations on AI, digital governance, and climate finance, a renewed and rebalanced partnership with the UK will be central to shaping the twenty-first century’s geopolitical architecture.
Author’s bio:
Dr. Maheep is the Principal Investigator of a national project on India’s Soft Power Diplomacy. He contributes regularly on relevant issues shaping national and global affairs.
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