Global Times

Wider India app ban means darker days for investors VOICE

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The Indian government has announced on Tuesday its intention to block more Chinese apps, including AliExpress, in a list of 43 on “spurious national security grounds.”

According to Indian media outlet reports, some Indian internet giants have expressed their support for the decision made by New Delhi, which is understand­able because through this action the government has actually helped to drive their Chinese competitor­s out of their country.

The move also marks the latest in a series of protection­ist measures taken by Indian authoritie­s to boycott products and services linked to China.

Against the background of the lingering China- India border deadlock, India's stoking of a growing nationalis­t sentiment as a means of promoting economic protection­ist policies has not only severely damaged the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese companies, but also delivered a heavy blow to the confidence of investors from other countries.

From banning Chinese mobile apps to various forms of restrictio­ns on Chinese investment, the Indian government may genuinely believe that they are battling to protect the interests of domestic industries from competitiv­e Chinese rivals, but such an approach is actually weakening the global competitiv­eness of Indian companies in the long run.

India has long been seen as one of the world's most protection­ist economies, and the xenophobia exhibited by its leaders is not just directed at Chinese companies.

For a long time, high tariffs and taxations have been a major headache for many multinatio­nal manufactur­ers in India.

In September, US motorcycle manufactur­er Harley- Davidson announced plans to exit the Indian market, which many believed could be mainly attributed to high tariffs and costs in the local market.

Despite the vision that India could one day become the world's next global manufactur­ing powerhouse, protection­ism has actually deprived India of the opportunit­y to improve its competitiv­eness by participat­ing in regional and even global competitio­n. While protection­ist measures may help avoid external shocks to domestic industries in the short term, in the long run, they will reduce the incentive for domestic industry players to push forward with necessary reforms to promote efficiency.

What's worse, India's crackdown on Chinese mobile apps appears to be signaling that the country's indulgence of protection­ist mentality is spreading from low- end manufactur­ing to the technology sector.

The collateral effect of India's political clampdown on Chinese businesses, products and services are likely to discourage more potential internatio­nal investors.

Given India's severe coronaviru­s epidemic situation and its battered economy, blatant market interventi­on detracts from the Modi government's efforts to attract the much- needed foreign investment.

With the unilateral restrictio­ns India has imposed on Chinese companies and investment­s under the guise of “national security,” it is not hard to conclude that it may arbitraril­y use the same rationale to discrimina­te against businesses from other countries in the future.

India's refusal to join the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p has already been interprete­d by the internatio­nal community as stubbornne­ss and a way of overprotec­ting its conservati­ve economy. If India's image cannot escape the stain of protection­ism, then foreign investment is bound to collapse.

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