India has concluded nine free trade agreements covering 38 nations: Commerce minister Goyal
Mumbai: India has concluded nine free trade agreements (FTAs), covering 38 nations, enabling the country’s shipments to get preferential access to nearly two-thirds of global markets, Union Commerce and Industry minister Piyush Goyal said on Wednesday.
Addressing the EY Entrepreneur Of The Year Awards ceremony here, Goyal said that these pacts will help Indian goods, services, agricultural and fisheries products, and labour-intensive sectors reach new markets, integrate into global value chains and enhance talent mobility.
He said that every country wants to enter into a trade deal with India and added that “I have had an engagement with Chile, which wants to conclude the FTA this week. We are launching (FTA talks with) Canada, hopefully when the prime minister (Mark Carney) is here on Monday.”
He said that India should be able to finalise the Terms of Reference and launch FTA negotiations with Canada.
Goyal underscored that India’s youth and human capital are at the heart of the nation’s growth story.
Reflecting on interactions with founders and business leaders, he said passion, innovation and skilled manpower are India’s biggest competitive advantages.
About the recently-concluded AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, the minister
said the global response demonstrated the depth and maturity of India’s innovation ecosystem and technological capabilities.
On concerns around artificial intelligence and employment, Goyal said AI would transform jobs rather than eliminate them and noted that India produces around 2.3 million STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) graduates every year and possesses an unmatched pool of young, adaptable and ambitious talent.
Drawing parallels with the Y2K era, he described AI as the next inflection point that will create better opportunities, higher-value work, stronger exports and deeper global integration for Indian businesses, while also increasing demand for skilled professionals in areas such as cybersecurity, data protection and system governance.
Emphasising that self-reliance does not mean isolation, Goyal said Atmanirbhar Bharat is about building resilient, trusted and diversified supply chains through global engagement.
Calling upon entrepreneurs and industry leaders to take global opportunities to MSMEs, farmers, exporters and fishermen across the country, he expressed confidence that young India will lead the nation through Amrit Kaal towards becoming a developed economy by 2047.
Earlier in the day, participating in a panel discussion at the event, veteran banker and chairman of Gift City, Uday Kotak, said that AI is for real, and we can debate on the time and speed of change and disruption.
Stating that the SaaS (software-as-service) companies are in the ‘Vishnu phase’, Kotak said that software application companies may have moved to the ‘Maheshwari phase’.
He also said that Indian banks face an intermediary cost of 250 bps.



