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FTAs and MRAs Set to Supercharge Indian Professional Services in 2026

Posted on December 24, 2025 By

New Delhi [India], December 24: Bharat wants its Indian Professional Services everywhere. And this time, the push comes with legally binding trade commitments, sharper skills, and fewer regulatory excuses.

India’s ambition to dominate global services trade took a decisive step forward this week. At a Chintan Shivir in New Delhi, the Commerce Ministry made one thing clear: Indian professional services exports can no longer rely on goodwill and informal access. They need enforceable market entry, modern skills, and regulatory readiness.

The message was blunt. The opportunity is massive. The window is open. But only if India moves faster.

Why Indian Professional Services Matter More Than Ever

Professional services are no longer a side hustle for India’s economy. They are a growth engine.

Commerce Secretary Rajesh Agrawal underlined that services trade delivers far higher domestic value addition than traditional merchandise exports. In simple terms, more money stays in India. More skills compound. More jobs travel up the value chain.

With a young workforce and rising global demand for accountants, nurses, architects, and digitally enabled professionals, India holds a natural edge. Demography alone, however, won’t win contracts abroad. Capability will.

And that’s where reform enters the room.

FTAs: From Paper Promises to Binding Market Access

Free Trade Agreements have often sounded impressive but delivered uneven results for services. The Commerce Ministry now wants a reset.

Agrawal stressed the need for legally binding commitments on professional services under FTAs. Not vague cooperation clauses. Not polite intentions. Real obligations that unlock foreign markets for Indian professionals.

This matters because professional services face non-tariff barriers everywhere. Licensing rules. Qualification recognition. Local residency norms. Without enforceable FTA provisions, Indian professionals remain stuck at the door.

The Chintan Shivir dedicated an entire session to leveraging FTAs for boosting professional services exports. The focus was clear: mobility provisions, transparent qualification procedures, and future-proof rules for digitally delivered services.

And yes, India is also being asked to open up. Officials acknowledged that allowing greater participation of foreign professionals in India could create win-win outcomes. Reciprocity works both ways.

Mutual Recognition Agreements: The Missing Multiplier

If FTAs open doors, Mutual Recognition Agreements decide who gets through.

Discussions on MRAs were refreshingly practical. Participants flagged the real issues: slow negotiations, uneven usage of signed MRAs, and lack of metrics to measure success.

The solution? Make India’s regulatory frameworks more recognition-ready.

That means aligning domestic qualification standards with global norms, simplifying procedures, and setting clear outcome benchmarks. How many professionals actually benefit from an MRA? How fast do approvals move? If nobody can answer that, the agreement is just paperwork.

MRAs were also linked to India’s future strategy around Global Capability Centres and digitally delivered services. As services scale without physical borders, recognition frameworks must keep up.

Making Indian Professionals Globally Ready

Market access is useless without market readiness.

Agrawal emphasised adopting global best practices and upgrading skills in line with technology and AI-driven change. The tone wasn’t academic. It was urgent.

Professional bodies were urged to rethink training models, revise outdated rules, and invest in continuous upskilling. International conferences, cross-border collaboration, and exposure to global standards were positioned as necessities, not luxuries.

India’s demographic dividend, officials noted, can only convert into export earnings if professionals are trained for what the world actually needs today. And tomorrow.

The ICAI Playbook: A Template Others Should Steal

One standout example kept coming up. The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India.

The ICAI playbook earned praise for building both hard and soft infrastructure geared for global markets. International chapters. A dedicated international directorate. Certification courses focused on technology and AI.

It works because it’s market-driven, not ceremonial.

Other professional bodies were encouraged to adapt this model to their own sectors. Not copy-paste. Adapt. Different professions, different realities. Same global ambition.

Nursing, Architecture, and Beyond

The Indian Nursing Council’s efforts drew particular appreciation.

Indian nurses face some of the toughest regulatory barriers abroad, especially in advanced economies. Despite that, initiatives like high-fidelity simulation labs, centres of excellence, and language training are expanding international access.

These aren’t cosmetic upgrades. They address exactly what foreign regulators demand.

Similarly, perspectives from the Council of Architecture highlighted the need for alignment with international norms while preserving professional integrity at home.

The takeaway was consistent. Global mobility doesn’t happen by accident. It’s engineered.

Building Networks That Actually Work

Another session focused on forming and expanding professional chapters abroad. Not as social clubs, but as strategic nodes.

Indian missions overseas were identified as valuable connectors. Professional bodies were encouraged to intensify engagement with foreign counterparts and regulators, using diplomatic channels where possible.

In global services, relationships matter almost as much as credentials.

Digital Delivery, Data, and the Next Frontier

Future-proofing professional services means thinking beyond physical movement.

Discussions covered digitally delivered services, data privacy, and protection frameworks. As Indian professionals increasingly serve clients remotely, regulatory clarity becomes critical.

The conversation also touched on foreign universities setting up campuses in India. This presents both competition and collaboration opportunities. Exposure to global education standards could raise the bar across professions, if managed smartly.

What Happens Next

This wasn’t a talk shop. The Commerce Ministry confirmed that action points from the Chintan Shivir will be taken forward with stakeholders.

The objective is straightforward. Give Indian professional services exports the regulatory muscle, skill depth, and global access they need to scale.

No drama. No hype. Just execution.

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