The ongoing West Asia crisis is no longer a distant geopolitical event - its consequences are being felt across India's most critical sectors. Rising crude prices, disrupted maritime corridors, strained supply chains, and shifting capital flows are collectively testing the resilience of an economy deeply integrated with the region through trade, energy, remittances, and investment. India imports nearly 90% of its crude oil, with a significant share sourced from the Gulf, while key agricultural exports, pharmaceutical shipments, automotive components, and textile trade all move through routes now rendered costly and unpredictable.

The crisis is exposing structural vulnerabilities that predate the conflict, from fertiliser import dependency and export concentration to thin working capital buffers in MSMEs and logistics fragility in pharma supply chains. Sectors employing tens of millions, supplying medicines to the developing world, and underpinning India's $100 billion textile export ambition are all contending with compounding pressures simultaneously.

"Impact of the West Asia Crisis on Indian Sectors" is a sectoral PoV examining how the crisis is reshaping Agriculture, Investments, Automotive, Textiles, and Pharmaceuticals; and what India must do to convert disruption into durable resilience.

This PoV has been prepared by Primus Partners.