US ends special trade treatment for India amid tariff dispute Published duration 1 June 2019

image copyright Getty Images image caption Mr Modi and Mr Trump have had cordial ties but their countries are at odds over trade

The US will end preferential trade status for India next week, President Donald Trump has confirmed amid a deepening row over protectionism.

India had been the largest beneficiary of a scheme that allows some goods to enter the US duty-free.

However that status will end on Wednesday, Mr Trump said.

In March he announced that it would be revoked because India had failed to provide adequate access to its markets, but Mr Trump gave no date.

On Friday he said: "It is appropriate to terminate India's designation as a beneficiary developing country."

media caption Sujitha Rajendrababu tells the BBC how getting a job at a car factory has changed her life

Until now, preferential trade treatment for India under the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) programme allowed $5.6bn (£4.3bn) worth of exports to enter the US duty free.

The move is the latest push by the Trump administration to redress what it considers to be unfair trading relationships with other countries.

Last month the US ended Turkey's preferential status under the scheme.