As per recent updates, Indian Farm exports are growing at a faster pace than overall merchandise exports despite Trump Tariffs. According to the Government data, the value of farm produce exports in April-September 2025 at $25.9 billion. It has recorded an 8.8% jump over the $23.8 billion for the corresponding six months of 2024. It is more than the 2.9% growth of the country’s aggregate goods exports, from $213.7 billion in April-Sept 2024 to $219.9 billion in April-Sept 2025.
Moreover, Indian Farm Exports grew by 6.4 % (from $48.8 billion to $52 billion), as against the trivial 0.1% rise for all merchandise exports (from $437.1 billion to $437.7 billion).
Data of Indian Farm Exports – An overview
Non-Basmati Rice exports have been boosted after the lifting of Restrictions on shipments imposed between September 2022 and August 2023 due to domestic food inflation pressures. That included an outright ban on exports of broken and white non-basmati rice, and a 20% duty on parboiled shipments. Due to the rapid and heavy rainfall and overflowing stocks in the government godowns, non-basmati exports are on track to surpass the $6.5 billion record.
Notably, Buffalo meat exports are also about to overtake the earlier high of $ 4.8 billion in 2024-15, if the present growth rate is sustained for the rest of this fiscal. Marine products exports also, which have gone up by 17.4 % in the first half of this fiscal and could end bettering the $8.1 billion all-time high of 2022-23. Moreover, Coffee exports from Indian have doubled from $738.9 million in 2019-20 to $ 1.8 billion in 2024-25. At present, the fiscal is likely to witness it top $2 billion. Fruits and vegetables exports also recorded a steady growth, in fresh form like from $ 1.4 billion in 2019-20 to $2.1 billion in 2024-25) and processed (from $958.5 million to $1.8 billion) forms. The trend has been sustained in the current fiscal as well.
Indian farm exports in last decade
Indian Farm exports have demonstrated considerable volatility in the last decade, collapsing from $43.3 billion in 2013-14 to $32.8 billion in 2015-16, before recovering to $41. 9 in 2020-21, $50.2 billion in 2021-22 and the peak of $53.2 billion scaled in 2022-23. Notably, the above trend has broadly mirrored movements in international agri-commodity prices.
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