// Global Analysis Archive
The Diplomat reports that the EU–India free trade agreement concluded on January 27, 2026 will eliminate key tariffs on Indian exports, intensifying competition in the EU market. The document suggests Bangladesh faces heightened trade-diversion and post-2029 preference risks unless it secures GSP+ or a new framework and upgrades beyond price-led apparel exports.
Kyrgyzstan’s rapid growth in 2024–2025 is linked to trade diversion tied to Russia’s war in Ukraine, stronger gold revenues, and rising remittances, with logistics and construction expanding domestically. The same drivers increase exposure to sanctions scrutiny, inflation and housing pressures, and the risk that corridor-based gains fade if trade routes or geopolitics shift.
The Diplomat reports that the EU–India free trade agreement concluded on January 27, 2026 will eliminate key tariffs on Indian exports, intensifying competition in the EU market. The document suggests Bangladesh faces heightened trade-diversion and post-2029 preference risks unless it secures GSP+ or a new framework and upgrades beyond price-led apparel exports.
Kyrgyzstan’s rapid growth in 2024–2025 is linked to trade diversion tied to Russia’s war in Ukraine, stronger gold revenues, and rising remittances, with logistics and construction expanding domestically. The same drivers increase exposure to sanctions scrutiny, inflation and housing pressures, and the risk that corridor-based gains fade if trade routes or geopolitics shift.
| ID | Title | Category | Date | Views | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RPT-358 | EU–India FTA Reshapes South Asia’s Trade Hierarchy, Raising Pressure on Bangladesh’s EU Export Model | EU-India FTA | 2026-01-29 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-1282 | Kyrgyzstan’s Boom: Trade Diversion Windfall Meets Sanctions and Overheating Risks | Kyrgyzstan | 2025-12-09 | 0 | ACCESS » |