Moneycontrol

How tariffs are eating into export gains from a weak rupee

This year, steep US tariffs are offsetting the benefit of an undervalued rupee

November 27, 2025 / 16:16 IST
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The rupee has depreciated 3.5 percent against the US dollar from the end of March to the end of October 2025, showing a gradual weakening in line with broader emerging‑market currency trends.

Despite a sharp depreciation since 2013, from around 60 to almost 90 against the dollar, merchandise exports grew only modestly, from $313 billion in 2013 to about $440 billion in 2024-25.

While a weaker currency usually makes exports more competitive, experts say the impact has been blunted by years of higher inflation, which kept the rupee’s real effective exchange rate from falling as much as the nominal slide suggests.

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And this fiscal, high US tariffs are further eroding whatever cost advantage the currency might otherwise have offered.

The rupee held near 89.24 on November 27, having weakened to a record 89.49 on November 21 following a wider trade deficit and foreign portfolio investment outflows. Its recent recovery, albeit slightly, is seen on account of possible intervention by the Reserve Bank of India.