Editorial Simplified: Eyes on India | GS – II

Relevance: GS Paper II (International Relations)


Why has this cropped up?

Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Australia have unveiled strategies to forge closer economic ties with India.


The flux in Asia

  • Asia is in a state of flux. China’s Belt and Road Initiative is reshaping the region’s geography, with roads and railways traversing Eurasia and new ports dotting the Indian Ocean basin. Beijing’s militarisation of the South China Sea continues, despite negotiations towards a code of conduct.
  • Japan has found itself in an unexpected leadership position, resuscitating the Trans-Pacific Partnership and concluding a trade agreement with the European Union. Tokyo is now contemplating constitutional revisions that would enable it to play a more overt military role.
  • Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and Australia have all unveiled strategies to diversify their economic interdependence, away from mainland China and towards Southeast Asia and India. The most recent is the ongoing trade and tariff war between the U.S. and China.
  • A longer-term concern is Beijing’s use of its economic muscle for political purposes, whether in suspending rare earth metal exports to Japan in 2010 or punishing a major South Korean corporation for Seoul’s decision to install a missile defence system in 2017.
  • China’s limited market growth potential and questions of access and reciprocity are additional considerations. To this end, Japan’s Free and Open Indo-Pacific strategy is meant to diversify investments to more promising markets in Southeast Asia, India, and Africa.
  • South Korea has unveiled a New Southern Policy. While the policy is focussed on Southeast Asia, it also “makes India Korea’s key partner for cooperation”.
  • Similarly, Taiwan, a G20-sized economy whose political status is disputed, has announced a New Southbound Policy with significant accompanying investments in India by Taiwanese electronics manufacturers.
  • Finally, Australia’s government has commissioned an ambitious India Economic Strategy with the goal of making India its third-largest investment destination and export destination by 2035.

Conclusion

The stars are aligning in Asia for the acceleration of India’s economic growth. Investors, increasingly backed by their governments, are increasingly focussed on the Indian market. But with more protectionist sentiments taking root, a legacy of poorly-negotiated trade deals, and uneven economic liberalisation, the likelihood of India taking full advantage of these opportunities remains slim.


 

Leave a Reply