&w=3840&q=100)
Amid ‘penalty' threat on India, a look at trade between US and Russia
US President Donald Trump is said to be frustrated with India over the trade deal. Reuters
The United States has fired fresh shots at India over its relationship with Russia.
On Thursday, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent claimed India had 'not been a great global actor'. Bessent said the entire trade team including US President Donald Trump were frustrated with India.
This comes in the backdrop of Trump announcing a 25 per cent tariff on Indian goods plus a 'penalty' for India buying crude oil from Russia. Some see this as a pressure tactic from the US president after trade talks which have seemingly stalled.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
But what happened? What did Bessent and others say? And how much trade do the US and Europe do with Russia?
What happened?
The United States on Thursday, evidently frustrated with the status of the trade talks, took aim at India once again.
'Well, I don't know what's going to happen. It will be up to India. India came to the table early. They've been slow rolling things. So I think that the President, the whole trade team, has been frustrated with them', Bessent said.
He pointed out that India had been purchasing large quantities of crude oil from Russia, which has been under sanction from the West.
Russia over the years has been selling crude oil to India at a discount – which has resulted in New Delhi saving billions.
Bessent wasn't alone.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio also slammed India, Saying that New Delhi buying oil from Moscow was funding its Ukraine war.
Rubio said this was a point of irritation for the United States.
'Look, global trade – India is an ally. It's a strategic partner. Like anything in foreign policy, you're not going to align 100 per cent of the time on everything', Rubio told Fox Radio.
Rubio said it was unfortunate that India's oil purchases continue to fund Russia's Ukraine operations.
Bessent and Rubio's remarks came after Trump earlier took to social media to slam India and Russia, saying they 'can take their dead economies down together'.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. Reuters
'I don't care what India does with Russia. They can take their dead economies down together, for all I care. We have done very little business with India, their tariffs are too high, among the highest in the world. Likewise, Russia and the USA do almost no business together. Let's keep it that way,' Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Trump added that India has 'always bought a vast majority of their military equipment from Russia'.
They 'are Russia's largest buyer of energy, along with China, at a time when everyone wants Russia to stop the killing in Ukraine', he added.
Trump's remarks have not gone down well in India.
Which makes sense considering that both the United States and Europe continue to trade with Russia.
How much trade does US do with Russia?
First let's look at the United States' trade relationship with Russia.
Though the trade relationship has been in steady decline ever since Moscow's invasion of Kyiv in 2022, it hasn't stopped completely.
In 2022, the US imported goods worth $15 billion from Russia.
As of May 2025, the US' imports from Russia were at $2.1 billion.
This included imports of $196 million in January, $339 million in February, $523 million in March, $492 million in April, and $539 million in May.
The US imported fertilisers, precious metals, inorganic chemicals, wood products, and some machinery from Russia.
Meanwhile, the US' exports to Russia were valued at around $230 million through May 2025.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Photo of President Vladimir Putin released by the Kremlin
In 2024, Washington imported goods worth around $3 billion from Moscow – a decrease of 34 per cent from 2023.
Still, its monthly imports from Russia hit a high of $438.5 million in May 2024.
The US' exports to Russia in 2024 were $526.1 million, down 12.3 percent from around $600 million 2023.
The US mainly sent Russia transportation and telecommunication equipment.
The two countries' trade deficit was at $2.5 billion in 2024, a decrease of 37.5 per cent from 2023 when the deficit was at $4 billion.
While many products are under sanctions, the US continues to import fertilisers, non-ferrous metals and inorganic chemicals from Russia.
Fertilisers, at $1.30 billion, made up the major chunk of imports from Russia in 2024.
The US also imported non-ferrous materials worth $876.5 million and inorganic chemicals worth $683 million in 2024.
The US also imported wood products ($89.44 million), and some machinery ($80 million) and precious metals and stones from Russia in 2024.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
What about the EU and Russia?
At the start of 2022, Russia was a major trading partner of the EU.
However, trade between Russia and EU has also been on a decline ever since the Ukraine war.
Trade has fallen from $283.3 billion in 2022 to $74.3 billion in 2024.
The EU's imports from Russia have shrunk from $105.6 billion in 2022 to $39.5 billion in 2024.
The EU's exports to Russia decreased from $177.7 billion in 2022 to $34.7 billion in 2024.
The trade deficit, which was at $72.1 billion in 2022, has fallen to $4.8 billion in 2024.
The decline has mainly been in fossil fuels—especially crude oil, pipeline gas, and refined petroleum – after the US-led West imposed sanctions on Russian oil and gas in the aftermath of the Ukraine invasion.
While the European Union has announced it will stop importing Russian gas by 2027, the bloc is by no means united on the matter.
The EU and Russia continue to trade in fertilisers, LNG and metals and raw materials.
It is also important to note that despite the decline, many European nations remain hooked on Russian gas and LNG.
Slovakia and Hungary, who are openly pro-Moscow, still import Russian crude oil via the Druzhba pipeline.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Hungary, Slovakia, and Austria continue to import Russian pipeline gas via TurkStream and Balkans.
While the European Union has announced it will stop importing Russian gas by 2027, the bloc is by no means united.
Experts say that for many nations in the EU, getting completely off Russian gas will not be easy – or cheap. They express scepticism that it can be done within a few years.
India and China hit back
India initially responded to Trump's tariffs by saying it has 'taken note' and is 'studying its implications'.
'India and the US have been engaged in negotiations on concluding a fair, balanced and mutually beneficial bilateral trade agreement over the last few months. We remain committed to that objective. The Government attaches the utmost importance to protecting and promoting the welfare of our farmers, entrepreneurs, and MSMEs,' the Ministry of Commerce and Industry said in a statement.
'The Government will take all steps necessary to secure our national interest, as has been the case with other trade agreements including the latest Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement with the UK,' the government said.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
However, after Trump's social media post, India has hit back at the US, telling Washington that it is no longer interested in buying the F-35s.
India has consistently said it will put its national interest above all else and pointed to the West's double standards when it comes to dealing with Russia.
China's deputy permanent representative to the UN Geng Shuang slammed Washington on Thursday saying that the US itself continues to engage in trade with Russia to this day.
'Why should it be acceptable for the US to do so, but not for others? Isn't this 'only allowing oneself to set fires while forbidding others from lighting lamps?'' Geng said at a UN Security Council meeting.
With inputs from agencies

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
14 minutes ago
- Business Standard
India reacts with outrage to Trump's tariff hike, 'dead' economy remarks
India is hardly alone in facing Trump's trade wrath - and not the subject to the very highest rates - but the news left business and political leaders wondering how to cope with the fallout Bloomberg By Satviki Sanjay and Swati Gupta Shock, dismay and angst swept across India as businesses, policymakers and citizens digested US President Donald Trump's sharp remarks and a surprise 25 per cent tariff rate earlier this week. While Indian government officials weighed a response and business groups tallied the cost of the trade barrier, the local social media flared up with users protesting Trump's comments and criticizing Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi for not speaking up. It started with Trump saying that India's trade barriers were the 'most strenuous and obnoxious,' in a Truth Social post July 30. He added the US may also impose a penalty for New Delhi's purchase of Russian weapons and energy. Less than a day later, he ripped into India again for aligning with Russia, calling them 'dead economies' in another post. I don't think any head of state has insulted India as Trump does. I don't know how @narendramodi calls him a friend and doesn't speak up. Tariffs, penalties, and saying 'I don't care what India does with Russia. They can take their dead economies down together, for all I care. — Maheshwer Peri (@maheshperi) July 31, 2025 With no imminent trade deal, the 25 per cent tariffs kicked in as of Friday. India is hardly alone in facing Trump's trade wrath — and not the subject to the very highest rates — but the news left business and political leaders wondering how to cope with the fallout. 'Blunt-Force' Message 'Overnight, the US-India trade equation shifted from tense to turbulent,' said Akshat Garg, assistant vice president at Choice Wealth, a Mumbai based financial services firm. The levies 'feel less like structured policy and more like a blunt-force political message.' Complicating the narrative around the India trade deal — or the lack of it — was the US pact with its traditional rival Pakistan that came through on the same day. As the US released rates across the world on Aug. 1, India's relative disadvantage to competitor exporting countries became more apparent, dampening moods and stoking tempers further. 'The biggest blow is that Pakistan and Bangladesh got a better rate than us,' V. Elangovan, managing director at SNQS Internationals, an apparel maker in the south Indian manufacturing hub of Tirupur, told Bloomberg News. 'We were expecting something in the 15 to 20 per cent range.' India's annoyance can be traced back in part to Trump declaring himself the peacemaker that helped broker a ceasefire in the armed conflict between India and Pakistan in May. The move was seen as an effort to upstage Modi and put the two South Asian neighbors on an equal footing, despite India's larger military and economy. The events of this week have cemented that impression further in the eyes of some Indian observers. India has hoped it could do a fair deal with US. But succumbing to bullying is not part of the deal. At the end of the day, a trade deal has to be fair, and it must ensure that lives of Indians become better, not worse. Trump too shall pass. US tariffs are not the end of the… — sushant sareen (@sushantsareen) July 30, 2025 When the tariff rate news first dropped in late Wednesday evening in India, Ashish Kanodia recalls being 'very disturbed.' A director at Kanodia Global, a closely held exporter that gets over 40 per cent of its revenue from the US selling home fabrics to toys, the entrepreneur already has two of its largest US customers seeking discounts to make up for the levy. 'The next six months are going to be difficult for everyone,' Kanodia said, adding that profit margins will be squeezed. If the pain continues for 'months and months,' he said he'll have to start cutting his workforce. The US is India's largest trading partner, with the two-way trade between them at an estimated $129.2 billion in 2024. Compared with India's 25 per cent, Bangladesh was subjected to a 20 per cent tariff, Vietnam got a 20 per cent levy and Indonesia and Pakistan each received 19 per cent duties. 'We know that we have got a deal that is worse than other countries,' said Sabyasachi Ray, executive director at The Gem and Jewelry Export Promotion Council. 'We will take it up with the government.' Quite the unravelling of the Delhi - Washington relationship over the past 48 hours... ???????????????? > Trump announces 25% tariffs against India > Trump announces oil deal with Pakistan > US imposes sanctions against Indian petrochem companies for trading with Iran — Kabir Taneja (@KabirTaneja) July 31, 2025 Trump's actions mark a 180-degree turn for New Delhi's hopes of preferential treatment over regional peers. It was among the first to engage Washington in trade talks in February, confident of hammering out a deal sooner than others. Trump had called India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi 'my friend' in a Feb. 14 post on X and the bond between the two countries 'special.' India is now weighing options to placate the White House, including boosting US imports, Bloomberg News reported citing people familiar with the matter, and many hope that the bilateral relationship and the tariff rate can still be improved. 'It is a storm in the India-US relationship at this moment but I think there's a good chance that it will go away,' Vivek Mishra, deputy director of the Strategic Studies Programme at Delhi based Observer Researcher Foundation, told Bloomberg News. Indian business and trade groups are supporting the government's stance on the deal as the negotiations for a US-India trade deal continue. Negotiating Tactic Jewelry businesses 'are worried but they are not panicking' because they hope a more favorable deal can be worked out, said Ray of the gems export body. 'The negotiation that should be happening should be a win-win, not a win-lose.' The abrupt announcement by Trump over social media when negotiations with India were ongoing 'seems like a knee-jerk reaction,' according to Rohit Kumar, founding partner at public policy research firm The Quantum Hub. 'This appears to be a negotiating tactic aimed at unresolved discussion points,' Kumar said.


Economic Times
14 minutes ago
- Economic Times
US stocks slump on latest tariffs, soft jobs data
Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel U.S. stocks slumped on Friday, and the S&P suffered its biggest daily percentage decline in more than two months as new U.S. tariffs on dozens of trading partners and a surprisingly weak jobs report spurred selling weighing on equities was an 8.3% tumble in shares after the company posted quarterly results but failed to meet lofty expectations for its Amazon Web Services cloud computing hours before the tariff deadline on Friday, President Donald Trump signed an executive order imposing duties on U.S. imports from countries, including Canada, Brazil, India and Taiwan, in his latest round of levies as countries attempted to seek ways to reach better denting confidence in the economic picture, data showed U.S. job growth slowed more than expected in July while the prior month's report was revised sharply lower, indicating the labor market may be starting to report significantly pushed up expectations the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates at its September meeting."There's no way to pretty-up this report. Previous months were revised significantly lower where the labor market has been on stall-speed," said Brian Jacobsen, Chief Economist at Annex Wealth Management in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin."Last year the Fed messed up by not cutting in July so they did a catch-up cut at their next meeting. They'll likely have to do the same thing this year." Market expectations the Fed will cut rates by at least 25 basis points at its September meeting stood at 86.5%, according to CME's FedWatch Tool, up from 37.7% in the prior Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 542.40 points, or 1.23%, to 43,588.58, the S&P 500 lost 101.38 points, or 1.60%, to 6,238.01 and the Nasdaq Composite lost 472.32 points, or 2.24%, to 20, S&P 500 recorded its biggest single-day percentage decline since May 21 while the Nasdaq suffered its biggest daily percentage drop since April the week, the S&P 500 fell 2.36%, the Nasdaq declined 2.17%, and the Dow fell 2.92%.The CBOE Volatility Index, also known as Wall Street's fear gauge, closed up 3.66 points at 20.38, its highest close since June was the biggest drag on the Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq and pushed the consumer discretionary index, down nearly 3.6% as the worst performing of the 11 major S&P 500 reporting earnings was Apple , which lost 2.5% after it posted a current-quarter revenue forecast well above Wall Street estimates, but CEO Tim Cook warned U.S. tariffs would add $1.1 billion in costs over the briefly extended declines after Trump said he ordered the commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Erika L. McEntarfer, to be fired in the wake of the jobs data."(Trump) didn't seem to be disappointed with the last five jobs reports," said Art Hogan, Chief Market Strategist, B. Riley Wealth, Boston, saying that the firing stood out as irregular."I think this is clearly something that happens in dictatorships, not in democracies."The Federal Reserve said Governor Adriana Kugler is resigning early from her term and will exit the central bank on Aug. 8, enabling President Donald Trump to select a new governor as he has ramped up pressure against Chair Jerome Powell recently to cut interest issues outnumbered advancers by a 2.17-to-1 ratio on the NYSE, and by a 2.69-to-1 ratio on the S&P 500 posted eight new 52-week highs and 29 new lows, while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 29 new highs and 202 new on U.S. exchanges was 19.51 billion shares, compared with the 18.44 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.


Economic Times
14 minutes ago
- Economic Times
IT sector hiring down 1% YoY in July; AI, ML see continued surge at 41%: Naukri JobSpeak report
iStock Hiring activity in India's IT sector saw a 1% year-on-year decline in July, according to the latest Naukri JobSpeak report on recruitment trends in the white collar job market. This marks a drop from the 5% growth recorded in the overall dip in IT hiring, artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) roles continued to see strong demand. Hiring in this space remained stable at 41%, in line with last month's figures. The global capability centre (GCC) job market showed a 5% increase in July, down from the 11% growth seen in June. Also Read: IT sector hiring rose 5% YoY in June; AI, ML see 42% spike: Naukri JobSpeak Report Overall, white-collar hiring grew by 7% in July, driven mainly by non-IT industries. However, this is much lower than the 11% increase in June. Among the major sectors, hospitality led with a 26% rise in hiring, followed by the insurance sector, which posted a 22% for fresh graduates saw more than 8% growth, fuelled by non-IT sectors such as education, oil & gas, and real estate. South Indian cities stood out in this category, with Coimbatore seeing a 17% rise and Kochi a 15% increase in fresher the other hand, hiring in the 16-plus years experience band saw 13% growth, compared to 15% last month. This demand was mainly driven by industries such as BPO (business process outsourcing), ITES (information technology enabled services), pharmaceuticals, and metro cities saw a strong rise in hiring activity by unicorns, with Chennai at the top with a 32% increase, followed closely by Delhi NCR (+31%) and Pune (+22%).'Non-IT sectors have been showing solid hiring momentum for a while now, especially when it comes to fresher roles. It's encouraging to see this consistent demand coming from industries like Hospitality, Insurance, and Education,' said Pawan Goyal, chief business officer at Naukri. Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. Jane St: How an options trader smelt a rat when others raised a toast TCS job cuts may not stop at 12,000; its bench policy threatens more Unlisted dreams, listed disappointments? NSDL's IPO leaves pre-IPO investors riled. Regulators promote exchanges; can they stifle one? Watch IEX Did Meesho's Valmo really deliver a knockout punch to e-commerce logistics? Sebi's settlement with market intermediaries: More mystery than transparency? Trump tantrum: Check the Indian pulse of your portfolio. 71 stocks from 5 sectors for whom Trump may not even be noise F&O Radar| Deploy Short Strangle in Nifty to gain from Theta decay Stock Radar: PI Industries stock showing signs of momentum; takes support above 50-DEMA – time to buy?