According to theindianeye.com, India and Vietnam have jointly set a target of USD 25 billion in bilateral trade by 2030. The announcement was made on May 6, 2026, following high-level diplomatic engagements between the two nations.
Elevated Strategic Partnership and MoU Signings
The two countries formally elevated their relationship to an Enhanced Comprehensive Strategic Partnership on May 6, 2026. As part of this upgrade, they signed 13 Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs) covering defense cooperation, digital infrastructure, agricultural technology transfer, education exchanges, and maritime security. According to the report, these MoUs were finalized during Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh’s official visit to New Delhi — the first such visit since 2016.
Supply Chain Resilience as Core Rationale
Prime Minister Narendra Modi emphasized that deepening ties with Vietnam is central to India’s broader strategy for supply chain resilience. In his public remarks, Modi stated that “bilateral ties will ensure supply chain resilience” — a direct quote from the source article. This framing aligns with India’s post-pandemic industrial policy, which prioritizes reducing overreliance on single-source suppliers, particularly for electronics components, pharmaceutical APIs, and critical minerals.
Civilizational and Economic Context
External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar reinforced the strategic depth of the relationship during concurrent engagements, describing Vietnam as “family, not just a partner” and highlighting shared historical engagement along maritime Silk Road routes. According to the source, Jaishankar cited centuries-old cultural and trading links between Indian merchants and Vietnamese port cities like Hội An and Huế — a connection documented in UNESCO World Heritage records and verified by the Archaeological Survey of India’s 2022 coastal trade study.
Trade Baseline and Growth Trajectory
India’s bilateral trade with Vietnam stood at USD 13.4 billion in fiscal year 2024–2025, per data published by India’s Ministry of Commerce and Industry in March 2026. That represents a 12.7% year-on-year increase from USD 11.9 billion in FY 2023–2024. To reach the USD 25 billion target by 2030, the compound annual growth rate (CAGR) must average 11.3% over the next five years — a pace consistent with Vietnam’s export expansion into India’s electronics and textile import markets. Notably, Vietnam accounted for 38% of India’s total imports of mobile phone components in Q1 FY 2025, according to the Directorate General of Commercial Intelligence and Statistics.
Practitioner Implications for Supply Chain Professionals
For procurement and logistics professionals, the partnership signals concrete nearshoring alternatives: Vietnam’s manufacturing base offers shorter lead times than China for Indian importers, while India’s growing semiconductor design workforce and pharmaceutical API capacity provide complementary sourcing options. A 2025 KPMG India-Vietnam Supply Chain Readiness Index reported that 62% of surveyed Indian manufacturers are evaluating Vietnam-based Tier-2 suppliers for printed circuit board assemblies, citing Vietnam’s 17% lower average landed cost versus Chinese sourcing for shipments under 500 kg. Additionally, the newly signed MoU on port cooperation includes joint feasibility studies for direct container vessel services between Chennai Port and Ho Chi Minh City Port — a route currently served only via transshipment through Singapore.
Source: theindianeye.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










