Strip away today’s headlines — a live UK pact, a record export quarter — and a structural question remains. Trade agreements open doors; they do not, by themselves, make a product cheaper to build. India’s durable prize is manufacturing competitiveness: the ability to make goods at world price and quality, at scale, from Indian soil. Market access is the invitation; competitiveness is what lets a firm walk through the door and win the order.
The levers are unglamorous and well understood. Logistics costs that still run higher than in rival economies; power reliability and price; the time and paperwork to clear a container; the depth of a local components base so a factory is not hostage to imported parts. Each shaves or adds a few percentage points to landed cost — and in export markets, a few points is the difference between a signed order and a lost one to Vietnam or the wider ASEAN bloc.
A trade deal changes the price at the border. Competitiveness changes the price at the factory gate — and that is the number that ultimately wins the order.
The honest account names the gaps: capital still costs more than in competitor economies, land and labour rules can slow scale-up, and too much output sits with sub-scale units that cannot meet a large export order on time. These are hard, structural problems — but they are precisely the ones that recent reform and external finance, including a fresh multilateral loan aimed at private-sector expansion, are designed to attack.
The constructive, long-view read is that competitiveness compounds. Every rupee shaved from logistics, every hour cut from customs, every component localised makes the next export order easier to win and the one after that — and turns a good trade quarter into a durable manufacturing base. The deals grab the headlines; the factory-gate cost is where India’s export decade will actually be decided.


