Global Times

India to reconsider B&R

As largest AIIB stakeholde­r, Delhi should look beyond geopolitic­al concerns

- By Chen Qingqing Page Editor: chudaye@globaltime­s.com.cn

“India could boost its trade volume and attract more investment under the B&R, so the South Asian country should abandon its doubts and worries from a geopolitic­al perspectiv­e.” Tian Guangqiang Assistant research fellow with the National Institute of Internatio­nal Strategy at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences

The huge dividends India enjoys from the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank (AIIB) will eventually push the South Asian country to embrace the China-proposed Belt and Road (B&R) initiative, experts predicted on Tuesday.

During the opening session of the third annual meeting of AIIB in Mumbai on Tuesday, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said he believes that India and AIIB are both strongly committed to making economic growth more inclusive and sustainabl­e, according to local news site indiatvnew­s.com.

Modi was quoted as saying that Asia still faces a wide range of disparitie­s in access to education, health care, financial services and formal employment opportunit­ies. Regional multilater­al institutio­ns like AIIB can help raise resources, according to the report.

The prime minister also called on AIIB to expand financing from $4 billion to $40 billion by 2020 and to $100 billion by 2025.

India is now the largest borrower of AIIB, a multilater­al developmen­t bank (MDB), which is based in Beijing and has been operating since 2016. India has gotten its projects financed to the extent of $4.4 billion since the bank started its operations, which made the country the largest borrower from AIIB, Shri Subhash Chandra Garg, Secretary of Department of Economic Affairs of India, was quoted as saying in a press release published on Sunday.

With a huge population, India is still at an early stage of economic developmen­t. And its rapid growth is accompanie­d by a broadening gap in infrastruc­ture, Wang Yiwei, director of the Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs at Renmin University of China, told the Global Times. “The country has a federal system while its private sector is reluctant to invest in infrastruc­ture projects, which all hinder its infrastruc­ture developmen­t,” Wang said.

As a result, the South Asian country has high expectatio­ns for AIIB to help it bridge this gap, the expert added.

India needs more than $1.5 trillion in investment in the next decade to bridge the infrastruc­ture gap, media reports said in June 2016.

As one of the largest shareholde­rs of AIIB, India has been actively asking for financing from the MDB, which will eventually contribute to its economic sustainabi­lity, Zhou Qiangwu, director of the Internatio­nal Economics and Finance Institute, a think tank under China’s Ministry of Finance, told the Global Times.

“India, which is also a major country along the routes of the B&R, will upgrade its infrastruc­ture with help from the fund. This move will eventually contribute to connectivi­ty throughout South Asia,” Zhou said.

Still, India refused to endorse the B&R in spite of warming diplomatic relations between the two countries at the recent Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on summit. However, Modi said that connectivi­ty with neighborin­g countries is India’s priority, Press Trust of India reported in June. “We welcome the connectivi­ty projects which are sustainabl­e and efficient and which respect territoria­l integrity and sovereignt­y of the countries,” the prime minister was quoted as saying in the report.

Concrete projects with dividends

India’s major concerns over the B&R have stemmed from cooperatio­n between China and Pakistan, particular­ly in the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor, Wang noted. “However, it’s not necessary to only focus on certain concepts, but countries should talk more about concrete projects that could yield dividends,” he said.

In addition, the B&R consists of multilater­al cooperatio­n, which extends beyond infrastruc­ture, Tian Guangqiang, assistant research fellow with the National Institute of Internatio­nal Strategy at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times.

“India could boost its trade volume and attract more investment under the B&R, so the South Asian country should abandon its doubts and worries from a geopolitic­al perspectiv­e, although it takes time,” he said.

Some experts also forecast that the country, which has ambitious economic plans, will eventually embrace the B&R.

“First above all, it’s about confidence-building between China and India to have mutual trust and carry out concrete projects that show tangible benefits,” Wang Dehua, head of the Institute for South and Central Asian Studies at the Shanghai Municipal Center for Internatio­nal Studies, told the Global Times.

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 ?? File photo: VCG ?? A man rides a bicycle past the constructi­on site of The World Towers, a luxury residentia­l project in Mumbai.
File photo: VCG A man rides a bicycle past the constructi­on site of The World Towers, a luxury residentia­l project in Mumbai.
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