:

Modi Pushes Self-Reliance to Fight Back

top-news
https://thedailyhints.com/public/frontend/img/post-add/add.jpg

Ø  Trump tariffs India

Ø  Trump’s 50% tariff on India 2025

Ø  Modi self-reliance push amid trade war – Impacts, tax cuts and more

Today, August 27th, 2025, US President Donald Trump’s tough 50% tariff on most Indian goods kicks in. This doubles the earlier 25% duty, punishing India for buying cheap Russian oil and weapons. It’s a big shock for India's economy, the world’s fifth largest, since the US was its top trade buddy. But Prime Minister Narendra Modi isn’t backing down. He’s urging Indians to go “self-reliant” with “Made in India” signs everywhere and promising huge tax cuts to boost spending. This could hurt exports like clothes, jewels and shrimp but Modi’s plan aims to fire up home demand and soften the pain.

Details & Context

The tariff storm started weeks ago when Trump signed an order adding 25% extra on India for helping Russia’s economy through oil deals. Now at 50%, it’s one of the highest anywhere, hitting stuff like garments, gems, shoes and chemicals hard. India sells about $80 billion worth to the US yearly and half could face this wall. Why.? Trump says India’s Russian buys fuel the Ukraine war, even though India calls it unfair since others do the same.

Modi, speaking from Delhi’s Red Fort on Independence Day, wore a saffron turban and told crowds to embrace “Swadeshi” – buy and make local. He repeated this in recent talks, saying global selfishness is rising but India won't cry; it’ll rise strong. His government is rushing tax fixes, like cutting income taxes by $12 billion earlier and now simplifying GST to two levels. This could pump $20 billion into pockets, helping folks buy more cars, clothes and homes, especially around Diwali.

In places like Bengaluru’s garment factories or Kolkata’s protest spots, where folks burned Trump’s effigy on August 13th, worry is high. But Modi’s message is clear: self-reliance from pride, not fear. Manufacturing is stuck at 15% of GDP, despite subsidies, so he’s pushing harder for local growth.

Quotes

·       Modi fired up crowds: “We should become self-reliant – not out of desperation but out of pride. Economic selfishness is on the rise globally and we must rise above and not allow others to hold us in their clutches.”

·       A US official said: “The tariff is to deter countries from supporting Russia’s economy through oil imports.”

·       On X, journalist Barkha Dutt posted: “Ready to Pay Personal Price | Modi’s Strong First Response to Trump’s 50% Tariff – Interests of farmers, fishermen, dairy will never be compromised.”

·       Another user, @BRICSinfo, shared: “Indian Prime Minister Modi promises to make India self-reliant following President Trump's 50% tariff.”

·       Experts from Jefferies noted: “Combined with income tax cuts, GST reforms should provide a meaningful push to consumption.”

·       Morgan Stanley added: “This is crucial amid headwinds from global tensions and tariffs.”

Additional Information

To keep this fresh, I dug into X and web searches for real-time buzz on “Trump 50% tariff India” and “Modi self reliance tariff”. On X, since August 1st, posts spiked with over 20 mentions of tariffs in latest mode, many praising Modi's stand. For example, @spectatorindex tweeted: “Prime Minister Modi vows to build a self-reliant India in first major speech since Trump announced 50% tariffs,” getting 2,745 likes. User @shekharkapur called it “a declaration of Economic Independence” with 872 likes.

Web trends show “Trump tariffs India 2025” surging with 100K+ monthly searches tied to rising US-India tensions. Similar past hits: In 2019, Trump pulled India’s trade perks over tariffs but India bounced back by boosting US energy buys. Now, India’s Russian oil imports jumped 70% this year, making it 35% of total, per reports.

X semantic search for “Trump imposes high tariffs on India Modi responds with self-reliance” from August 1-27 yielded 15 posts, like @szarabi's: “PM Narendra Modi’s message to the US: No matter the pressure, India won’t bend” with a video clip. This adds irony – Modi fasted for Trump's long life in traditions but now it's tariff war.

·       Cultural twist: Like Karwa Chauth but economic – women fast for husbands, here India “fasts” from US reliance for strength.

v Read More: Husband Ends Life Over Wife's Egg Curry Refusal During Karu Bhaat Festival

Impact Analysis

This tariff could slash India’s exports by 40-50% per think tanks, hitting  millions in textiles (Tiruppur hubs) and shrimp farms (Kerala). GDP might dip 0.5-1% but experts say rural bumper crops and urban tax boosts could limit it to 6% growth. Positively, it pushes diversification – India eyes Africa, Europe for trade and stocks rose on S&P upgrade.

For US, higher prices on cheap Indian goods could fuel inflation, hurting consumers. It strains Indo-Pacific ties, pushing India closer to China-Russia, per analysts. Jobs: Millions at risk but Modi’s GST overhaul and rate cuts (1% already) plus salary hikes for 11.8 million government folks could spark lending and spending boom. UBS says GST cuts have bigger “multiplier effect” than past ones.

Conclusion

Trump’s 50% tariff is a harsh wake-up but Modi’s self-reliance call and tax bonanza show India’s fighting spirit. From Red Fort speeches to factory floors, the focus is building inside strength over crying outside. As global trade gets selfish, India’s path to top-3 economy stays on track with smart reforms. It's tough now but pride and pride could win long-term.

Call to Action (CTA)

Follow The Daily Hints on Social Media,

Ø  Facebook

Ø  Instagram

Ø  Threads

Ø  WhatsApp

Ø  YouTube

Ø  Twitter

Ø  Email ID

Get more hot takes on global shakes. Follow and share The Daily Hints for daily scoops that matter.!

From West Bengal District’s News to Kolkata News, Other States News to Whole India NewsInternational NewsEntertainment News to Sports NewsScience News to Technology News and all other news updates, follow and Support our news portal @TheDailyHints.

https://thedailyhints.com/public/frontend/img/post-add/add.jpg

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *