The once-thriving industry clusters in Tiruppur had slowed to a nervous crawl by the middle of January. India’s $16 billion garment industry used to be propelled by the buzz of knitting machines, but now it flickers erratically. More often than not, exporters look at inboxes rather than fabric piles—waiting, readjusting, and hoping.
Under the pretense of monetary retribution, the most recent U.S. tariffs were implemented with especially disruptive impact. Citing a trade imbalance and currency undervaluation, they imposed an 18% tariff on Indian cotton knitwear. Politicians presented it as a daring economic tactic. It came like a quiet landslide on the earth.
Shipments meant for American shelves languished past their due dates in Ludhiana, where thermal wear companies operate nonstop through autumn. A Chicago-bound shipment was sent back to port, unopened, underpaid, and unsalvageable, according to one exporter.
The “dead economy” charge, which was thrown from an American debate stage, seemed especially flimsy in this light. Rather of impeding India’s progress, the tariffs charred supply linkages that had taken decades to establish and seconds to halt.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Topic | U.S.-India Trade Dispute: Textile Industry Impact |
| Focus Areas | Tiruppur and Ludhiana textile hubs, U.S. tariffs, political backlash |
| Tariff Trigger | U.S. policy targeting India for allegedly undervaluing the rupee |
| Political Context | American campaign rhetoric branding India a “dead economy” |
| Industry Outcome | Export orders slashed, job losses, capacity reduction |
| Source Links | Yahoo Finance, CryptoSlate, DL News |

Small and medium-sized businesses (SMEs) were especially hard hit by the impact. Due to their narrow profit margins and uncertainty about future demand, many companies completely stopped producing. After years of stitching their livelihood, some resorted to liquidation, selling off the machines. In an effort to keep at least a skeleton team, others attempted to renegotiate worker contracts.
The last three months saw a 21.4% decline in India’s textile exports. Even if that number is statistically accurate, it ignores something crucial: the hesitancy that is now a part of every new contract and corporate decision.
Surprisingly, these effects were widespread. The consequences affected even American importers. American companies rushed to fulfill orders from other hubs, such as Bangladesh and Egypt, only to find quality inconsistencies and logistical bottlenecks. Retail shelves are occasionally empty, more expensive, and refilled later.
Collaboration with Southeast Asian suppliers provided some relief. However, it was short-lived and extremely ineffective. One Dallas-based sourcing agent admitted: “Tiruppur was predictable.” Chaos is what we currently have.
Using current trade accords, Ludhiana’s spinners have recently moved to European consumers. Though volumes are still far lower than in the months before to the levy, some orders have restarted. The cautious optimism is encased in low-volume trials and hedged bets.
As I stood outside a closed dyeing plant on the Tiruppur-Avinashi route, I reflected on how easily momentum can be lost when empathy is outpaced by policy.
Indian policymakers have responded by accelerating their efforts to diversify their commerce. So far, the PLI (Production Linked Incentive) program, which was introduced as a safety net, has not gained much support. According to many exporters, it isn’t suited to their scale or sense of urgency. “Five-year blueprints are not necessary,” a plant owner informed me. “Next month’s buyer is required.”
Some entrepreneurs are adapting, to their credit. Some have switched to circular fashion, turning textile waste into blends of useful fibers. In order to lower input costs and improve environmental credentials, others are investing in solar energy.
Interestingly, Tiruppur’s Design Clusters, which were previously just concerned with volume, are now moving toward higher-margin custom design services for boutique customers. It is incredibly good at protecting against abrupt shocks, despite its slower operation.
A few exporters have seen a notable improvement in their balance sheets through strategic agreements with buyers in the UAE and Australia. Despite their diminutive size, these new channels are demonstrating unexpected stability.
The U.S. action, which was once praised as a shrewd geopolitical ploy, has begun to face criticism even domestically. Midwest textile unions have yet to witness a significant increase in orders despite being promised a manufacturing resurgence. A few mills revived for a few weeks before quietly shutting down once more.
It is horribly antiquated to think that a country’s tariffs may revive another’s industry in the setting of contemporary supply chains. Prosperity elsewhere has not resulted from the suffering put on Indian exporters. All it is is re-distributed uncertainty.
An organization based in Tiruppur has started providing complete traceability to buyers in Europe by incorporating blockchain-enabled logistics. Particularly for an area better recognized for traditional manufacturing than for cutting-edge innovation, it’s a daring move.
The cash issue still plagues Ludhiana’s early-stage players. Peer lending platforms are becoming more popular, particularly those aimed at MSMEs. Although these instruments are still developing, they are quite flexible for sustaining basic cash flow in lean times.
If anything, the current crisis has highlighted how precarious the relationship between production and policy is. The worldwide supply network that seemed robust turned out to have a sensitive rhythm that was difficult to recover from disruptions.
However, Tiruppur does not have a defeatist tone. It is adjusting. Previously dependent on seasonal orders from Macy’s or Target, exporters are now investigating direct-to-consumer platforms and European direct-to-market alternatives. Yes, the growth is slower, but it is theirs.
Some units have grown much faster at meeting niche demand by utilizing automated warehouses and digital marketplaces, which has decreased their reliance on bulk U.S. contracts.
Additionally, it’s becoming more and more obvious that this approach has backfired—both diplomatically and economically—as news outlets around the world start to highlight the unintended repercussions of the U.S. tariffs.
Economic strain is nothing new to India. However, it seems that every healing stitch this time was self-sewn.
