The India–Oman Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement is not merely an expansion of bilateral commerce but a strategic legal instrument shaping economic power in the Indian Ocean and Gulf region. Concluded as bilateral trade crossed USD 10.61 billion in FY 2024–25, the agreement embeds economic cooperation within a predictable legal framework at a time when global trade is increasingly fragmented and politicised.
Legal design: A modern economic partnership
The CEPA establishes an integrated framework covering goods, services, investment, professional mobility, and regulatory cooperation. Its structure aligns with World Trade Organization requirements under GATT and GATS, while offering substantially deeper commitments. By prioritising certainty, transparency, and enforceable market access, the agreement reflects contemporary trade law thinking beyond simple tariff concessions.
Goods trade: Market access with policy space
Oman has granted India one hundred percent duty free access across more than ninety eight percent of tariff lines, covering nearly all Indian exports by value. This significantly enhances competitiveness for Indian sectors such as engineering, chemicals, agriculture, marine products, textiles and gems and jewellery.
India’s reciprocal liberalisation is carefully calibrated. By excluding sensitive sectors including dairy, cereals, petroleum products and select agricultural goods, India preserves food security and MSME protections while still expanding access for Omani exports. This balance strengthens the agreement’s domestic sustainability.
Supply chains and regional reach
Preferential access to Oman’s USD 28 billion import market enables Indian firms to displace competitors from China, Türkiye, Europe and other GCC states. More importantly, Oman functions as a gateway to wider Gulf and East African markets, amplifying the agreement’s strategic and logistical value beyond bilateral trade volumes.
Services and professional mobility: A legal milestone
Services trade is a central pillar of the CEPA. Oman’s commitments across one hundred and twenty seven sub sectors exceed its GATS obligations and create binding rights for Indian service suppliers in information technology, education, healthcare, professional services and research.
The recognition of professional categories and the expansion of intra corporate transferee limits represent a significant legal breakthrough in Gulf labour mobility. The provision for future negotiations on a Social Security Agreement further signals an integrated approach to labour protection and services trade.
Regulatory cooperation and non tariff barriers
The agreement’s provisions on Technical Barriers to Trade and Sanitary and Phytosanitary measures address one of the most persistent obstacles to international commerce. Recognition of India’s Export Inspection Council certificates, pharmaceutical manufacturing approvals and halal and organic certifications reduces duplication, compliance costs and approval timelines, while maintaining regulatory autonomy.
Investment, employment and domestic impact
The CEPA’s employment effects are broad based, spanning agriculture, food processing, textiles, marine exports, plastics and gems and jewellery. By improving export certainty for MSME driven sectors, the agreement strengthens domestic political support and enhances India’s participation in global supply chains.
Strategic significance in a fragmented world
Beyond economics, the CEPA deepens India’s strategic engagement with a key Gulf partner while reinforcing a rules based approach to regional integration. For Oman, it supports diversification and positions the country as a trade and logistics hub linking Asia, Africa and the Middle East.
A template for India’s future trade strategy
The India–Oman CEPA exemplifies a new generation of trade agreements that combine market access with legal precision and geopolitical awareness. Its importance lies not only in increased trade flows, but in the durable institutional framework it creates for long term economic integration in a rapidly evolving global order.