
The US tariff cut on Indian goods to 18%, announced by President Trump late on February 2, brings immediate and welcome relief to Tamil Nadu’s export engine. After months of punitive pressures—where effective duties had climbed as high as 50% through layered reciprocal and additional levies—this rollback promises a sharper competitive edge for the state’s textiles, leather, knitwear, and allied sectors. Exporters in Tiruppur, Coimbatore’s industrial heartland, and leather clusters like Ranipet can now breathe easier, with lower landed costs in the crucial US market likely to unlock higher volumes, better margins, and fresh momentum in an already resilient export story.
The Deal at a Glance: From 50% to 18% Effective Relief
Official announcements from US sources and corresponding Indian confirmations describe the trade adjustment as slashing the “reciprocal” tariff from 25% to 18%, while fully removing an extra 25% punitive layer imposed earlier over geopolitical factors (notably linked to oil sourcing). This nets a substantial drop from the combined ~50% effective rate that had weighed on shipments since mid-2025. The change took effect immediately, as per the White House-aligned statements, offering quick wins for price-sensitive goods.
For Tamil Nadu, which contributes 12-15% to India’s total merchandise exports (per Directorate General of Commercial Intelligence and Statistics breakdowns), the US remains a top destination—absorbing 40-50% of the state’s textile and apparel outflows. With the state’s exports hovering around 52 billion USD annually (TN Economic Survey 2024-25), even a modest rebound in US-bound flows could add meaningful value.
Tiruppur Knitwear: Prime Beneficiary in the Spotlight
Tiruppur, the knitwear capital, stands to gain the most. Ministry of Textiles data shows India’s knit apparel exports at ~4.8 billion USD in FY 2024-25, with Tiruppur accounting for nearly 90% and the US taking half (~2.4 billion USD from the cluster). High duties had capped growth at 4-5% in recent years, squeezing margins by 5-10% and forcing some units to pivot to other markets.
A tariff drop from ~50% effective to 18% translates to 30-32% cost relief on landed prices. Historical patterns from lower-duty periods (pre-2018 MFN averages of 12-15%) saw 8-12% annual volume growth in apparel to the US. Elasticity estimates from RBI trade models suggest a 10% tariff reduction can lift exports 8-12%; here, the larger cut could spur 15-25% higher shipments from Tiruppur in the coming quarters, potentially adding 0.4-0.6 billion USD annually if demand holds.
Leather and Footwear Clusters: Margin Revival Ahead
Tamil Nadu’s leather sector—40% of India’s national output—exported ~2.2 billion USD in 2024-25, with 30-35% heading to the US (~0.7-0.8 billion USD). Duties in the 9-12% MFN range, plus punitive add-ons, had flattened growth and eroded competitiveness against lower-tariff rivals.
The new 18% cap (effectively lower than recent peaks) offers 20-30% relief on high-duty categories like finished leather and footwear. Past data from 2023-24 shows flat volumes under pressure; a similar rollback scenario could revive 10-15% growth, boosting clusters in Ranipet-Vaniyambadi and supporting integrated units that feed apparel chains.
Broader Boost for Other Sectors and the TN Economy
Engineering goods, auto components, and chemicals—another 5-6 billion USD from Tamil Nadu to the US—face lower base tariffs (2-5%), so gains here are incremental but supportive of supply-chain stability. Overall, the relief could lift state exports to the US by 1.5-3 billion USD in a full year, per projections aligned with DGCI&S elasticity trends and NITI Aayog export models.
This feeds directly into Tamil Nadu’s GSDP (over 320 billion USD), where exports drive 15-20% of industrial activity and sustain millions of jobs. A 10-15% sectoral rebound could add 0.5-1% to GSDP growth, create 150,000-250,000 direct/indirect jobs (based on NSSO labor multipliers), and strengthen foreign exchange inflows for rupee stability.
Outlook: Momentum Meets Caution
The immediate positive—sharper pricing power, revived orders, and renewed investor confidence—aligns with Tamil Nadu’s export ambitions (targeting 100 billion USD by 2030 via state policies). US import demand from India grew 19% in 2025 (US Census Bureau), setting a strong base for uptake.
Yet realization depends on smooth implementation, no new barriers, and global demand stability. Exporters in Coimbatore and beyond can now plan with optimism: the tariff wall has come down, opening doors wider for “Made in Tamil Nadu” to shine brighter in American stores.

