Explained: How India–EFTA TEPA Aims to Touch $100 Billion

Explained: How India–EFTA TEPA Aims to Touch $100 Billion

India–EFTA TEPA is the first FTA linking trade to measurable investments and jobs. This report explains how the $100 bn goal could be reached, and what ground realities might hold it back.

New Delhi (ABC Live): India–EFTA TEPA: When the India–EFTA Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement (TEPA) came into force on 1 October 2025, it was hailed as a breakthrough. Unlike India’s earlier FTAs, it promised something concrete: $100 billion in FDI over 15 years and 1 million jobs.

For India, now the world’s fastest-growing large economy, this deal is more than market access—it’s a test of whether trade diplomacy can deliver tangible economic transformation.

The $100 Billion Question

What’s Promised

TEPA envisions $100 billion in investments by 2040, averaging $6.6 billion a year.

What the Data Says

  • In FY24, India received $70.9 bn in FDI, but EFTA’s share was only ~$3 bn.

  • Switzerland is the major contributor (~$2.5 bn), while Norway, Iceland, and Liechtenstein remain marginal players.

Analysis

  • For EFTA to meet its pledge, its annual FDI into India must more than double.

  • Sectors with potential: pharma, clean energy, finance, biotech, and high-tech manufacturing.

  • Success depends on India offering policy stability, fast-track approvals, and predictable taxation.

Jobs – Who Benefits?

The agreement promises 1 million direct jobs.

  • Reality Check: India’s workforce adds 7–8 million people every year.

  • The jobs TEPA brings will be skilled-sector heavy: IT, finance, precision tools, renewables.

  • Without integration into Skill India 2.0 and MSME networks, rural and low-skilled workers may be left out.

Narration: TEPA’s job promise is credible on paper—but risks becoming a white-collar story unless carefully implemented.

Trade Balance – A Hidden Risk

  • Current India–EFTA trade (2024): ~$32 bn total.

    • India’s exports: ~$11.3 bn.

    • Imports from EFTA: ~$21 bn.

    • Deficit: ~$9.7 bn.

Implication: TEPA could widen India’s deficit unless the investment side strengthens India’s export capacity. Without this, India risks repeating the ASEAN FTA experience, where imports surged but exports lagged.

Supply Chains – The Trust Factor

For EFTA, TEPA is about securing resilient supply chains beyond China. For India, it’s a chance to prove its global competitiveness.

  • India’s logistics costs: 13% of GDP vs 9% in OECD nations.

  • World Bank LPI (2023): India ranked 38th; Switzerland 9th.

Unless India upgrades its logistics corridors (Gati Shakti) and GST efficiency, supply-chain integration will remain aspirational.

Trustworthiness – Why TEPA Stands Out

Unlike past FTAs, TEPA includes:

  • Investment Facilitation Mechanism to track delivery.

  • Joint monitoring committees for transparency.

  • Dispute resolution provisions for predictability.

But: India’s contract enforcement ranking (163/190, World Bank Doing Business 2020) and history of regulatory unpredictability remain trust hurdles.

Verdict: TEPA is trustworthy in design but only credible if India follows through on domestic reforms.

Promise–Reality–Trust Matrix

Promise Ground Reality Trust Level Risk What India Must Do
$100 bn FDI Historic inflows < $3 bn/yr Moderate Gap >2x Policy stability, fast-track approvals
1 mn jobs Likely skilled-sector heavy Moderate–High Semi-skilled excluded Skilling + MSME integration
Doubling trade Imports may outpace exports Low–Moderate Deficit Tie FDI to export capacity
Supply chain hub High infra costs Moderate Competitiveness gap Accelerate infra & GST reforms

Why ABC Live Is Publishing This Now

Mainstream reporting shows ceremony and quotes. ABC Live explains the roadmap and risks:

  • How $100 bn could realistically be mobilised.

  • Why jobs may stay urban and skilled unless reforms widen access.

  • How trade deficits could offset gains if exports don’t rise.

  • Why TEPA is more credible on paper than ASEAN FTA or CEPA, but still fragile in delivery.

Why This Report Is Unique

  • Goes beyond headlines: Explains the how of the $100 bn target, not just the what.

  • Data-backed narrative: Uses FDI, jobs, trade, and logistics data to test feasibility.

  • Trust lens: Introduces a Promise–Reality–Trust Matrix for the first time.

  • Comparative view: Shows how TEPA differs from ASEAN FTA, CEPA, and RCEP.

  • Policy insights: Outlines concrete steps India must take to make TEPA credible.

Conclusion – Can India Touch $100 Billion?

The India–EFTA TEPA is more than trade—it is a trust test for India’s ability to convert diplomacy into real investment and jobs.

  • If successful, TEPA will become India’s template for future FTAs with EU, UK, and US.

  • If it fails, it risks being remembered as another over-promised but under-delivered agreement.

The journey to $100 billion is not about signatures in Delhi—it will be decided in India’s factories, offices, ports, and courtrooms.

Sources (with exact links)

  1. PIB – India–EFTA TEPA Signing (10 March 2024)

  2. EFTA Secretariat – Agreement Text

  3. PIB – TEPA Entry Into Force (1 Oct 2025)

  4. DPIIT – FDI Statistics 2024

  5. World Bank – Logistics Performance Index 2023

  6. World Bank – GDP Data

  7. ILO – India Employment Data

  8. NASSCOM – Indian IT Sector Report 2024

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