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Business

U.K.–India deal set to boost bilateral trade by over $34 billion a year

by Priya Shah – Business Editor July 25, 2025
written by Priya Shah – Business Editor

UK and India Forge Historic $34 Billion Trade Pact

Deal promises significant boost to bilateral commerce, slashes tariffs on key goods

The United Kingdom and India have inked a landmark free trade agreement expected to inject over $34 billion annually into their bilateral trade, a development hailed as “historic” by both nations’ leaders. The pact, finalized after three years of intensive negotiations, promises substantial benefits for consumers and businesses across both countries.

U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India walk in the grounds at Chequers on July 24, 2025, in Aylesbury, England. (Kin Cheung | Getty Images News)

Tariff Reductions and Economic Impact

The agreement dramatically reduces duties on a wide array of products, including automobiles, alcohol, and textiles. This move is projected to increase annual bilateral trade by £25.5 billion by 2040, building upon the £40 billion in goods and services traded in 2024. The U.K. government estimates its exports to India will face a reduced average tariff of 3%, down from 15%.

Keir Starmer stated the deal offers “huge benefits to both of our countries,” anticipating increases in wages, improved living standards, and lower consumer prices. Narendra Modi described the agreement as “a blueprint for our shared prosperity,” emphasizing improved market access for Indian goods such as textiles, jewelry, and agricultural products in the U.K.

Key Provisions of the Trade Deal

Under the pact, 92% of U.K. goods exported to India will have tariffs eliminated or reduced. Conversely, up to 99% of Indian goods entering Britain will be tariff-exempt. The agreement also includes provisions for temporary Indian workers in the U.K., exempting them and their employers from social security contributions for three years.

Specific tariff cuts include those on U.K. scotch and gin, which will be halved to 75% from 150%, eventually dropping to 40% over the next decade. Tariffs on brandy and rum will also see significant reductions. For the automotive sector, duties will decrease to 10% within five years, under a quota system, from a current high of 110%.

This agreement is a significant step as it represents one of India’s initial trade deals with an advanced economy. The U.K. accounted for 3% of India’s total goods trade last year, primarily in machinery and equipment. Economists suggest the deal will boost Indian sectors like textiles and jewelry, thereby supporting employment and industrial growth.

India’s trade surplus with the U.K. has expanded in recent years. While improved market access could widen this gap initially, phased reductions in U.K. export barriers may help to rebalance it over time. However, the overall trade volume is expected to rise regardless of the surplus’s direction.

Strategic Geopolitical Implications

Analysts believe the U.K.-India trade agreement could bolster both nations’ standing in ongoing trade discussions with other global partners, including the United States. Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief economist at Natixis Bank, noted the deal provides substantial “leverage versus the U.S.”

This pact follows the U.K.’s trade agreement with the U.S. in May and precedes a potential meeting between Keir Starmer and U.S. President Donald Trump. The U.K.-India deal is projected to add £4.8 billion ($6.5 billion) annually to British economic output, positively impacting its £2.85 trillion GDP from 2024.

For Narendra Modi, this trade deal serves as a catalyst for India’s discussions with other developed economies, reinforcing his vision of India as a key global trading partner. Sameep Shastri, vice-president of the BRICS Chamber of Commerce and Industry, told CNBC, “The deal with UK will set a tone to all the Western powers that … we are ready to trade on our terms.” India is particularly keen to finalize a trade agreement with Washington before new U.S. tariffs take effect in August.

The U.K. Parliament and Indian Parliament must ratify the agreement, a process that could take several months. The pact’s successful ratification hinges on parliamentary approval in both countries.

July 25, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Trump to visit Federal Reserve in person after threatening to fire Chair Powell

by Priya Shah – Business Editor July 24, 2025
written by Priya Shah – Business Editor

Trump Invades Fed: President’s Unprecedented Visit to Central Bank

Historic trip intensifies pressure on Chairman Powell over interest rates

President Donald Trump is set to visit the Federal Reserve on Thursday, marking a significant escalation in his ongoing campaign against Chairman Jerome Powell. This marks the first official presidential visit to the central bank in nearly two decades.

Challenging Central Bank Independence

The President’s presence at the Fed is a stark symbolic challenge to the institution’s traditionally protected independence. Presidents have historically respected the central bank’s insulation from political influence, both legally and practically.

This visit brings **Trump’s** persistent criticism of **Powell’s** refusal to lower interest rates directly to the chairman’s doorstep.

The White House confirmed the schedule, stating **Trump** would arrive at 4:00 p.m. ET on Thursday.

Dire Warnings and Legal Hurdles

Trump has repeatedly voiced dissatisfaction with **Powell’s** performance, even speculating about the Fed chair’s dismissal. This comes despite significant legal questions surrounding his authority to remove the central bank’s leader.

“I think he’s done a bad job, but he’s going to be out pretty soon anyway.”

—Donald Trump, President of the United States

Earlier this week, **Trump** reportedly canvassed Republican lawmakers regarding **Powell’s** potential firing, though he later downplayed such intentions. He stated, “We’re not planning on doing it … I think it’s highly unlikely, unless he has to leave for fraud.”

Powell himself has asserted that his removal “is not permitted under the law.”

While past presidents have voiced critiques of Fed chairs, none have made a move to dismiss the nation’s top central banker.

Historically, the Federal Reserve’s independence is crucial for economic stability. For instance, during periods of high inflation, like the early 1980s under Chairman **Paul Volcker**, the Fed’s ability to set monetary policy without direct political interference was vital for curbing price increases (Federal Reserve, 2023 Annual Report).

U.S. Federal Reserve Chair **Jerome Powell** and U.S. President **Donald Trump**.

This unprecedented visit underscores the unique pressures being applied to monetary policy decisions.

July 24, 2025 0 comments
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World

Content Writing Tips: Improve Your Skills & Productivity

by Priya Shah – Business Editor July 13, 2025
written by Priya Shah – Business Editor

Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Delta Air Lines is studying new types of airplane tickets — this time in the premium cabins at the front of the plane.

Airlines spent years slicing up their coach cabins, from extra legroom seats to bare-bones basic economy fares that don’t allow changes or include a seat assignment. Delta was a pioneer in the U.S. when it launched basic economy fares more than a decade ago with rivals United Airlines, American Airlines and others following suit.

But now airline executives are turning their focus to their premium cabins, where demand is holding up better this year than in the back of the plane.

Read more CNBC airline news

“Premium has certainly been where our margins have continued to expand, and so we’re highly focused on continuing to provide improved service to those customers and more segmentation,” Delta President Glen Hauenstein said on an earnings call with analysts on Thursday. “The segmentation that we’ve done in main cabin is kind of the template that we’re going to bring to all of our premium cabins over time because different people have different needs.”

Delta’s revenue from premium seats like business class rose 6% in the first half of the year to $10.6 billion, while main cabin economy ticket revenue dropped 4% to $11.7 billion. The carrier, the most profitable U.S. airline, has said for years that its share of sales from high-end seats and its lucrative loyalty program has been growing.

American Airlines new business-class suite.

American Airlines

U.S. carriers have largely ditched international first class in favor of larger business-class cabins, where lie-flat seats have more amenities than seats of past decades.

Hauenstein declined to detail possible changes to the premium seats. It’s not clear whether Delta would consider a cheaper first- or business-class ticket that might not include perks like lounge access or seat assignments, or a potentially bigger seat that could come with add-ons that standard tickets don’t have.

But Hauenstein said Delta is testing some possibilities on customers and surveying travelers.

“We haven’t rolled it out yet, not because we don’t have the technological capability, but we want to make sure that customers understand what we’re putting in market and that they find value in it,” he said.

Henry Harteveldt, travel consultant and president of Atmosphere Research Group, said he’s not convinced that Delta would consider a stripped-down premium fare.

“Airplanes are expensive … and it’s a lot easier when you give your passengers a reason to pay you more for your product than to pay you less,” he said.

United Airlines new Polaris cabin configuration

United Airlines

Other airlines are working to outfit their top-tier cabins to offer a few seats that have extra room and even space for a visitor, like United’s planned update to its long-haul Polaris cabin and American’s new seats on some of its Boeing 787 Dreamliners.

Delta’s partner, Virgin Atlantic, offers the “Retreat Suite” at the front of its Airbus A330’s Upper Class cabin that can be converted “so up to four people can enjoy an intimate dinner together in their own private social space.”

When asked whether Delta will update some of its highest-end seats, CEO Ed Bastian told CNBC Wednesday that “the premium products have had life cycles … and what we thought was state of the art six or seven years ago no longer is.

“We’re continuing to upgrade and update it. So that’s part of the cost of business,” he said. “But our product will be very, very nice.”

Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO

July 13, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Content Writing Tips: Improve Your Skills & Productivity

by Priya Shah – Business Editor July 11, 2025
written by Priya Shah – Business Editor

Key Points

  • Jamie Dimon told an event in Ireland on Thursday that Europe was “losing” on competitiveness and lacked the kind of global, successful corporations common in the U.S.
  • The JPMorgan Chase boss also told an event in Ireland that there was “complacency in the markets” around U.S. tariffs and rates.
  • Dimon said he saw a 40-50% chance that the Federal Reserve would need to raise interest rates to tackle inflation, against market pricing of around a 20% chance.

JPMorgan Chase boss Jamie Dimon did not pull his punches when he spoke at Ireland’s Department of Foreign Affairs. “You’re losing,” he said of European competitiveness with the U.S. and Asia, in comments reported by the Financial Times. “Europe has gone from 90% U.S. GDP to 65% over 10 or 15 years. That’s not good.” “We’ve got this huge, strong market and our companies are big and successful, have huge kinds of scale that are global. You have that, but less and less,” Dimon said on Thursday. That sentiment will not come as a shock to the region’s leaders and businesspeople, who have long stressed the need for the European Union to reduce trade barriers , complete its capital markets and banking unions , and streamline its regulation, tax and legal regimes to increase investment and boost growth in the region. Rising geopolitical tensions and fracturing trade ties with the U.S. and China have also highlighted Europe’s lack of sovereignty in spaces ranging from from energy and critical minerals to data centers , satellite communications and digital services . On addressing the issue of competitiveness, Dimon said: “Everything should be a single market.” “To finish it in the single market also means common banks, common disclosure laws, common exchange, common transparency laws, climate,” he said, according to the Irish Examiner. Investor attitudes toward Europe turned notably bullish in the first half of 2025, buoyed by expectations of a major fiscal boost in its biggest economy Germany, higher regional defense spending , lower interest rates and a period of relative political stability — particularly given the unpredictable policymaking and rhetoric coming from the White House. That drove a strong outperformance in public markets and also caught the attention of private market players seeking value opportunities. However, significant challenges lie ahead for the EU, including delivering on growth-supportive reforms and securing its relationship with its biggest bilateral trade and investment partner, the U.S. As of Friday morning, the status of an EU-U.S. tariff agreement remained in limbo . ‘Complacency in the markets’ Dimon also discussed market reaction to U.S. President Donald Trump’s latest tariff announcements this week, which have included 50% duties on Brazilian imports , a 50% rate on copper , and the threat of a 200% rate on pharmaceuticals. Traders have largely looked past the potential impact on inflation and growth, sending the S & P 500 and Nasdaq Composite to new closing records on Thursday — though sentiment appeared weaker early Friday . There is currently “complacency in the markets,” Dimon said Thursday, according to Irish Examiner, with investors now a “little desensitised” to tariff news. Inflation could re-emerge as a signficant problem for the U.S. and the chance of interest rates rising again is higher than most people think, Dimon also said. “The market is pricing a 20% chance [of a rate hike], I would price in a 40-50% chance. I would put that as a cause for concern,” he said. Last month, Dimon told a conference that the U.S. economy was vulnerable “to a downturn in the coming months,” with a “chance real numbers will deteriorate soon.”

July 11, 2025 0 comments
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World

Trump says countries aligning with BRICS bloc will face extra 10% tariff

by Lucas Fernandez – World Editor July 7, 2025
written by Lucas Fernandez – World Editor

U.S. President Donald Trump has threatened an additional 10% tariff on countries that orient themselves along the “Anti-American policies of BRICS.”

Trump’s announcement, which did not elaborate on any specific policy of BRICS, came as the group’s meeting is underway in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

The bloc’s leaders appeared to take aim at Trump’s sweeping tariff policies in a joint statement on Sunday, warning against “unjustified unilateral protectionist measures, including the indiscriminate increase of reciprocal tariffs.”

Without calling out the U.S., the leaders voiced “serious concerns about the rise of unilateral tariff and non-tariff measures which distort trade and are inconsistent with WTO rules,” warning that the “proliferation of trade-restrictive actions” threaten to disrupt the global economy and worsen the existing economic disparities.

“Any Country aligning themselves with the Anti-American policies of BRICS, will be charged an ADDITIONAL 10% Tariff. There will be no exceptions to this policy,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social Sunday evening stateside.

Trump could have been provoked by the BRICS leaders’ joint statement taking a thinly veiled swipe at his tariff policies, said Stephen Olson, former U.S. trade negotiator and current visiting senior fellow at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute.

By “anti-American” policies, the president may be referring to “the desire expressed by BRICS members to move beyond a U.S.-led world order in finance and global governance,” said Olson, adding that how that alignment will be assessed was “anyone’s guess.”

This year’s BRICS host country Brazil did not respond to CNBC’s request for comments.

The BRICS group of developing nations also offered symbolic backing to fellow member, Iran, condemning a series of military strikes on the country, without naming Israel or the U.S which carried out the military operation.

The bloc includes Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, United Arab Emirates, Ethiopia, Indonesia and Iran. The grouping describes itself as “a political and diplomatic coordination forum for countries from the Global South and for coordination in the most diverse areas.”

The bloc seeks to challenge Western-dominated institutions of global economic governance, as well as to supplant the U.S. dollar’s role in the global economy, according to the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

This year, Chinese President Xi Jinping sent Premier Li Qiang to the BRICS meeting in his absence, while Russian President Vladimir Putin, who faces an arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court, attended online.

In response to Trump’s threat of 10% extra duty, a spokesperson for Chinese foreign ministry said at a regular press briefing Monday that China opposed any action of using tariffs as “a tool to coerce others.”

“China has been consistent in opposing any tariff war, trade war,” the spokesperson said, adding that “arbitrarily slapping tariffs does not serve the interests of any party.” That’s according to CNBC’s translation of her comments in Mandarin.

Separately, Trump confirmed that the U.S. will start delivering letters on Monday, detailing country-specific tariff rates and any agreements reached with various trading partners. That affirmed Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s comments over the weekend.

The Trump administration has said that tariffs announced in April will take effect on Aug. 1, instead of July 9, for countries that have not reached an agreement with the U.S.

Bessent rejected the idea that Aug. 1 was yet another new tariff deadline. “We are saying this is when it’s happening, if you want to speed things up, have at it, if you want to go back to the old rate that’s your choice,” Bessent said Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

In April, Trump announced a 90-day pause on the steep tariffs he had unveiled just days prior on most trading partners. That pause is due to expire on Wednesday, sparking concern among investors and U.S. trading partners.

— CNBC’s Erin Doherty, Lim Hui Jie contributed to this story.

July 7, 2025 0 comments
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Business

LGBTQ+ Entrepreneurship Surges: Record Numbers Launch Businesses

by Priya Shah – Business Editor July 1, 2025
written by Priya Shah – Business Editor

LGBTQ+ entrepreneurship Surges Despite Anti-DEI Climate

Libertyville,IL – July 1,2025 – Despite a growing anti-diversity,equity,and inclusion (DEI) environment,LGBTQ+ entrepreneurship is booming,reaching a milestone with 10% of new businesses started last year identifying as LGBTQ+ – a 50% increase from 2023 Nich Tremper, Senior Economist at Gusto, a small business software company, this surge indicates LGBTQ+ individuals are “not only stepping into entrepreneurship, but doing so on their own terms – building companies rooted in care, autonomy, and community.” A significant driver for thes entrepreneurs is a desire to positively influence their communities, with roughly one-third citing this as a primary motivation LGBTQ+ owned businesses in your community and advocate for inclusive policies that foster economic opportunity for all.

July 1, 2025 0 comments
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