Odisha News, Odisha Latest news, Odisha Daily - OrissaPOST
  • Home
  • Trending
  • State
  • Metro
  • National
  • International
  • Business
  • Feature
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • More..
    • Odisha Special
    • Editorial
    • Opinion
    • Careers
    • Sci-Tech
    • Timeout
    • Horoscope
    • Today’s Pic
  • Video
  • Epaper
  • News in Odia
  • Home
  • Trending
  • State
  • Metro
  • National
  • International
  • Business
  • Feature
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • More..
    • Odisha Special
    • Editorial
    • Opinion
    • Careers
    • Sci-Tech
    • Timeout
    • Horoscope
    • Today’s Pic
  • Video
  • Epaper
  • News in Odia
No Result
View All Result
OrissaPOST - Odisha Latest news, English Daily -
No Result
View All Result

The scaffolding for Odisha’s trade moment

Updated: February 20th, 2026, 08:30 IST
in Opinion
0
Sandip Pati

Sandip Pati

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on WhatsAppShare on Linkedin

By Sandip Pati

People in government and industry love to celebrate agreements. They believe that signing trade deals is the hard part; that once the ink dries, opportunities flow naturally. At the national level, the language around India’s new FTAs with the EU, UK, US, Oman, and New Zealand is confident, even triumphant. Trade could approach $200 billion with Europe alone. Bilateral flows with the UK could cross $100 billion within a decade.

Also Read

Rubio says US could resume aid to Ukraine

Widening Rift

1 day ago
Melvin Durai

Too many fights breaking out on flights

2 days ago

But agreements do not operate in a vacuum. They depend on something less visible and far less discussed: the economic scaffolding that allows opportunity to be captured rather than merely announced. Odisha is standing beneath that scaffolding, close enough to see it, but not yet positioned to climb.

For decades, Odisha has done one thing exceptionally well. It has supplied the raw materials that powered India’s industrial rise. Roughly a quarter of India’s iron ore, a fifth of its aluminium capacity, and a significant share of its steel output come from this state. Ports like Paradeep quietly handle over 100 million tonnes of cargo each year.

Yet Odisha accounts for less than 1.5 per cent of India’s merchandise exports. The state produces, but does not proportionately participate in global trade.

What happened is that Odisha confused the product with the position. The product was raw material. The position of integrated, certified, value-added participation in global supply chains was never built. Raw materials move even when institutions are thin. Bulk commodities find buyers regardless of export infrastructure or compliance frameworks. But that era is closing.

The new FTAs are not designed for raw material economies. They reward value addition, environmental compliance, and integration into global supply chains. Engineering goods, speciality chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and EV components are the currencies of the agreements India has signed. States that built export readiness early will capture disproportionate gains. States that do not will experience adjustment pressures without commensurate rewards. Odisha risks the latter not because it lacks potential, but because its extractive growth model never required such scaffolding.

Consider what is now on the table. If Odisha captured just five per cent of the incremental engineering and metals exports to Europe, it could add $6 to 7 billion in exports over time, a figure that exceeds its entire current export base. With the UK, British assessments project tens of billions in trade gains driven by automobiles, textiles, and pharmaceuticals. Odisha employs more than half a million people in textiles, yet remains peripheral in the global apparel trade. Not because markets are closed, but because standards, branding, and export readiness were never treated as core infrastructure. Even New Zealand and Singapore, smaller in scale, offer compounding advantages through Paradeep’s existing shipping lanes and supply chains, gains that are quiet but durable.

Then there is the service sector, the quiet giant. Services already account for over 40% of India’s exports, and the new FTAs explicitly expand market access for IT and digital trade. Yet Odisha holds below 2% of India’s IT exports. It has talent that is serving Silicon Valley in Bangalore. What it lacks is positioning and government intent. In a services-driven trade world, invisibility is a choice.

The employment consequences compound this failure. Manufacturing and services exports generate far more jobs per dollar than mining. For a state grappling with migration and limited non-mining employment, the difference between exporting ore and exporting components is not merely economic. Exporting ore funds the state. Exporting components could transform it.

India’s FTAs have changed the external environment. The door is open. Whether Odisha walks through it depends entirely on whether it builds the internal scaffolding: standards committees, export facilitation desks, skills alignment programmes, and institutional coordination. Unglamorous work. But this is what durable trade success looks like.

In the global economy, opportunity is rarely denied outright. It is offered conditionally. Those who are prepared step forward. Those who are not remain suppliers to someone else’s success.

The writer is a Consultant at Grant Thornton Bharat in economic growth and investment promotion space

Orissa POST – Odisha’s No.1 English Daily
ShareTweetSendShare
Suggest A Correction

Enter your email to get our daily news in your inbox.

 

OrissaPOST epaper Sunday POST OrissaPOST epaper

Click Here: Plastic Free Odisha

#MyPaperBagChallenge

Anshuman Sahoo

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Subhajyoti Mohanty

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Rajashree Manasa Mohanty

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Surya Sidhant Rath

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Sipra Mishra

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Debasis Mohanty

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Subhajyoti Mohanty

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Sarfraz Ahmad

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Arya Ayushman

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Lopali Pattnaik

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Ipsita

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Sibarama Khotei

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Praptimayee Biswal

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Ramakanta Sahoo

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Pragyan Priyambada

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Anup Mahapatra

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Aman Kumar Barisal

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Akriti Negi

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Priyabrata Mohanty

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Jyotshna Mayee Pattnaik

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Priyasha Pradhan

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Mandakini Dakua

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Chinmay Kumar Routray

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Ankita Balabantray

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Narendra Kumar

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Tabish Maaz

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Ramakanta Sahoo

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Adweeti Bhattacharya

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Faiza Firdous

December 12, 2019
?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Dibya Ranjan Das

December 12, 2019

Archives

Editorial

Hopeless Hong Kong

Hong Kong
February 18, 2026

The last nail into the coffin of whatever freedom is believed to be there in Hong Kong, a unique territory...

Read moreDetails

Raw Deal

India US trade deal
February 17, 2026

India’s recent trade agreement with the United States is being celebrated by the government at the Centre as a significant...

Read moreDetails

Tarique the Easterner

Tarique Rahman
February 16, 2026

The people of Bangladesh have spoken decisively that they still believe in democracy and would not be swayed by polarising...

Read moreDetails

Enforced Reverence

February 15, 2026

By Aakar Patel There is always a shortage of nationalism in our country, because there seems to be so much...

Read moreDetails
  • Home
  • State
  • Metro
  • National
  • International
  • Business
  • Editorial
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Jobs
Developed By Ratna Technology

© 2025 All rights Reserved by OrissaPOST

  • News in Odia
  • Orissa POST Epaper
  • Video
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Metro
  • State
  • Odisha Special
  • National
  • International
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Editorial
  • Entertainment
  • Horoscope
  • Careers
  • Feature
  • Today’s Pic
  • Opinion
  • Sci-Tech
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Jobs

© 2025 All rights Reserved by OrissaPOST

    • News in Odia
    • Orissa POST Epaper
    • Video
    • Home
    • Trending
    • Metro
    • State
    • Odisha Special
    • National
    • International
    • Sports
    • Business
    • Editorial
    • Entertainment
    • Horoscope
    • Careers
    • Feature
    • Today’s Pic
    • Opinion
    • Sci-Tech
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Jobs

    © 2025 All rights Reserved by OrissaPOST