India and South Korea set $50 billion trade target by 2030 at New Delhi summit
Prime Minister Narendra Modi and visiting South Korean President Lee Jae Myung announced a roadmap to nearly double bilateral trade to $50 billion by 2030, agreed to fast-track the long-pending CEPA upgrade and launched 25 outcome agreements covering defence, semiconductors and digital technology.
India and the Republic of Korea on 20 April 2026 elevated their Special Strategic Partnership during talks in New Delhi between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and South Korean President Lee Jae Myung, who was on a three-day state visit. It was the first incoming visit by a South Korean head of state in eight years, and the two leaders unveiled a five-year strategic vision for the period 2026 to 2030.
The headline economic announcement was a target to lift bilateral trade from about $27 billion at present to $50 billion by 2030. To enable that jump, both governments agreed to resume and expedite long-stalled negotiations to upgrade the India-Korea Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement, with a stated focus on tackling trade asymmetry and removing non-tariff barriers that have constrained Indian exports of steel, fisheries and chemicals.
On defence, the two countries agreed to launch a third phase of industrial cooperation, building on the K9 Vajra howitzer programme, and announced the Korea-India Defence Accelerator (KIND-X) to connect start-ups and researchers. A new India-Korea Digital Bridge initiative was launched to deepen joint work on artificial intelligence, semiconductors and digital infrastructure, and Prime Minister Modi announced the establishment of a Korean Industrial Township to help small and mid-sized Korean firms enter the Indian market.
In total, the two sides signed 25 outcome documents spanning trade, defence, technology, energy, shipbuilding, electric vehicles and global governance. The leaders also reaffirmed their commitment to a free, open and rules-based Indo-Pacific.
Exam angle: UPSC and other services frequently test the architecture of India's strategic partnerships. Aspirants should remember the $50 billion-by-2030 trade target, the CEPA upgrade, the K9 Vajra link, and the fact that South Korea is one of only a handful of countries with which India has a Special Strategic Partnership.
Key Points to Remember
- $50 billion bilateral trade target by 2030, up from about $27 billion currently
- CEPA upgrade negotiations to be resumed and fast-tracked
- 25 outcome documents signed across trade, defence, tech, energy, shipbuilding
- Korea-India Defence Accelerator (KIND-X) launched; third phase of K9 Vajra cooperation
- India-Korea Digital Bridge for AI, semiconductors and digital infrastructure
- Korean Industrial Township to be set up in India for SMEs
Exam Relevance
Important for UPSC GS-II (bilateral relations), trade-economy questions in SSC and Banking GA, and defence-cooperation questions in CDS/CAPF.
Related Articles
India's BRICS Presidency: Push for Reform, Implementation and Global South Voice
India's BRICS presidency aims to push the grouping from a consultative platform to an implementation-oriented …
India-Nepal Ties Stable Despite 2025 Political Transition, Says Outgoing Nepalese Envoy
Nepal's outgoing Ambassador Shankar Sharma said India-Nepal ties remained unaffected by the political churn that …
India-New Zealand FTA: Agra industry meet ahead of signing on 27 April
Union Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal and New Zealand Trade Minister Todd McClay led an industry …
India and US Conclude Latest Round of Bilateral Trade Agreement Talks in …
Indian and US negotiators concluded a round of talks on the proposed Bilateral Trade Agreement …
RBI Releases ₹3,000 Crore Swap Aid to Maldives Under SAARC Framework
India approved the first withdrawal of ₹30 billion to the Maldives under the SAARC Currency …