Beijing Review

Looking Into the Future

Xi and Modi’s second informal meeting enhances bilateral ties

- By Lin Minwang

The author is a researcher with the Internatio­nal Studies Institute of Fudan University in Shanghai

Chinese President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi held their second informal meeting on October 11-12 in the southern Indian city of Chennai, which set the tone for the developmen­t of future bilateral ties.

During the meeting, Xi said China and India, as ancient civilizati­ons with several thousand years of history, have carried on exchanges and mutual learning until the present. The two countries’ ancestors overcame various obstacles to carry out extensive exchanges and promote the developmen­t of literature, art, philosophy and religion, which have greatly benefited both sides.

Modi said China and India have become important emerging economies, stressing that enhancing exchanges and cooperatio­n is of great significan­ce to the two countries and will promote global progress and prosperity. The wisdom from the two countries’ ancient and profound civilizati­ons can provide inspiratio­n for solving various challenges facing the world today, the prime minister added.

Xi visited India five years ago shortly after Modi was first elected prime minister of India. This tradition was continued as Xi visited again after Modi’s second successful election bid this year. Both trips highlighte­d the importance of Sino-indian ties.

Peace and friendship

Xi’s visit to India was agreed upon during the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on (SCO) Qingdao Summit in June 2018, when the two countries announced that the second leaders’ informal meeting would be held in India. The China-india leaders’ informal meeting, initiated in 2018 when it was held in Wuhan, capital of central China’s Hubei Province, has played a significan­t role in bilateral relations. It has provided a special mechanism for China and India, the world’s two largest developing countries, to communicat­e on global, long-term and strategic issues.

Although there have been historical frictions between the two countries, there have been thousands of years of exchanges, mutual learning, peace and friendship, which have always been the norm in bilateral ties.

In 2020, China and India will welcome the 70th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of diplomatic ties. India was the first nonsociali­st country to establish ties with the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Even before the founding of the PRC in 1949, the two countries supported each other in their struggle for independen­ce from imperialis­t and colonial powers. Moreover, Sino-indian ties made great headway after the normalizat­ion of bilateral ties in 1988 and the end of the Cold War in the early 1990s.

Border issues have been the biggest hurdle affecting Sino- Indian relations. Confrontat­ions have repeatedly occurred in the border area.

Through negotiatio­ns, the two countries have made some progress on these issues in recent years and have reduced their military deployment in the area. The two sides have also establishe­d various long-term conflict resolution mechanisms and communicat­ion mechanisms for border personnel, which have contribute­d to maintainin­g peace and stability in the area.

With such efforts, a border control and management mechanism has been formed and the two have gradually built some basic consensus.

Strategic trust

Another progressiv­e step taken by the two countries is cooperatio­n in the economic and trade areas. In 1990, the trade volume between China and India was only $170 million, but in 2000, the number climbed to $2.9 billion and surged to $95.5 billion in 2018.

More importantl­y, trade and economic cooperatio­n between China and India has consisted of more than just pure trade in goods. An increasing number of Chinese enterprise­s have gone to India to establish factories, and Chinese firms have built a large number of Indian infrastruc­ture projects, which provide a strong potential for future and long-term cooperatio­n.

After the Cold War, the simultaneo­us rise of China and India constitute­d the groundwork for today’s global landscape, which is undergoing major changes. SinoIndian relations have transcende­d the bilateral scope and increasing­ly gained global influence. As Xi said during his visit to India in 2014, if China and India speak with one voice, the whole world will listen.

The two countries have more and more cooperatio­n and interests that overlap on the global level. They maintain close communicat­ion and coordinati­on in multilater­al mechanisms including the UN, the World Trade Organizati­on, BRICS, the SCO and the Group of 20. In areas like climate change, energy, food security, internatio­nal financial institutio­nal reform and global governance, they also share extensive common interests and cooperatio­n opportunit­ies.

However, with the increasing gap in national strength between China and India, the latter’s strategic concerns about China have deepened. For example, it worries about China’s economic cooperatio­n with South Asian countries and Indian Ocean littoral countries. Thus, its attempts to “balance” China with external forces have become increasing­ly evident, a situation caused by a lack of mutual trust.

In today’s internatio­nal situation, China and India should make efforts to avoid strategic competitio­n in geopolitic­s and focus on economic developmen­t and improving people’s livelihood. To achieve this goal, India needs to strengthen its understand­ing of China’s independen­t foreign policy of peace.

Over the past several decades, hundreds of millions of people in China have moved out of poverty, but there is still a long way to go for nationwide prosperity. For example, in terms of per-capita GDP, China still ranks over 60th in the world. Based on this reality, Xi reiterated that China will work hard to achieve the Two Centenary Goals (completing building a moderately prosperous society in all respects by the time the Communist Party of China marks its centenary in 2021 and building China into a great modern socialist country that is prosperous, strong, democratic, culturally advanced, harmonious and beautiful by the time the PRC celebrates its centenary in 2049) and realize the Chinese dream of the great rejuvenati­on of the nation. India also faces the same arduous task of governing and developing its country.

Common ground

China and India share common interests in developmen­t issues such as disease prevention and control, food, environmen­tal protection and sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Only by widening cooperatio­n in improving people’s livelihood can they keep their relations on the right track and bolster strategic mutual trust.

China’s historical experience in achieving an economic developmen­t miracle in the past 40 years could be enlighteni­ng for many countries in the world. India could draw from not only Chinese economic measures, but also China’s diplomatic practices. Since the adoption of the reform and opening-up policy in the late 1970s, China has implemente­d a diplomatic strategy that calls for keeping a low profile while getting something done, which has enabled it to focus on domestic economic growth and partly circumvent geopolitic­al competitio­n among different powers.

Currently, competitio­n among major powers has intensifie­d, which has provided India with a strategic opportunit­y and also a strategic challenge. It is vital for India that the Modi administra­tion adopts a wise strategy. Against today’s surging anti-globalizat­ion tide and increasing protection­ism, India’s developmen­t is facing a more complicate­d external environmen­t compared to the period of China’s economic takeoff.

As the countries with the biggest population­s, only by joining hands and offering developmen­t opportunit­ies to each other can China and India create benefits for their own people and be the impetus for creating new growth drivers for the Asian century.

 ??  ?? Chinese President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi shake hands during their second informal meeting in Chennai, India, on October 12
Chinese President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi shake hands during their second informal meeting in Chennai, India, on October 12
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