India's growing demand for dairy products, coupled with a limited domestic ability to meet that demand, might create opportunities for exporters like New Zealand.
In a report for ASB, US-based agribusiness expert Prof Bill Bailey said the Indian market had "massive" potential for the likes of New Zealand and the United States.
Both countries had made efforts to enhance and broaden opportunities to increase exports to India, particularly for food and agricultural products.
In view of the changing political climate in the US, particularly relating to trade policy, the potential for India to open up its economy to imports had improved.
India was projected to overtake China and become the world's most populous country by the early 2030s. However, unlike China, it had minimal dependence on imports of agricultural and food products.
China imported about $US160 billion worth of food and agricultural products in 2015 while India with only a slightly smaller population imported $US23 billion. That was likely to change as India's food needs grew, Prof Bailey said.