China Daily

Economic ties with India on the rise

- By REN XIAOJIN and ZHONG NAN Contact the writers at renxiaojin@chinadaily.com.cn

China will work to boost cooperativ­e platforms with India to infuse fresh vigor into business ties and usher in a new phase of cooperatio­n, the Ministry of Commerce said on Thursday.

The ministry made the remark as President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi prepared to hold an informal meeting in Wuhan, Hubei province, on Friday and Saturday. The two leaders are expected to discuss global issues and exchange views on the overall, long-term and strategic issues of China-India relations.

“China and India both are developing countries and major emerging economies with huge home markets,” said Gao Feng, spokesman for the Ministry of Commerce. “The two countries are highly complement­ary in terms of economic developmen­t models.”

Bilateral trade has been on the rise in recent years. The total trade volume between the two countries was $84.4 billion in 2017, up 20.3 percent year-on-year, setting a record, the Ministry of Commerce said.

Bilateral trade hit $22.13 billion in the first quarter of this year, up 15.4 percent from same period a year ago.

Chinese companies had invested over $8 billion in India by 2017, as the South Asian country became an important infrastruc­ture and investment market for them.

India primarily exports garments, plastics, chemicals, agricultur­al products, cotton, silver, copper and iron ore to China. China mainly ships electronic­s, machine tools, automobile­s and other transporta­tion products, home appliances, smartphone­s and constructi­on machinery and materials to India.

Xue Rongjiu, deputy director of the Beijing-based China Society for WTO Studies, said their trade doesn’t involve any significan­t direct competitio­n.

Though anti-globalizat­ion seems to be on the rise and many countries including China and India are suffering setbacks, the future of ChinaIndia business ties will be decided by stable political relations, fast-growing service businesses and complement­ary goods trade, especially in high-tech manufactur­ing and healthcare sectors, he said.

“Both sides have more space to expand trade and investment and deepen cooperatio­n in such fields as modern agricultur­e, energy, environmen­tal protection and urbanizati­on in the longrun,” he said.

“China has already offered more market access to Indian companies, from IT and services to pharmaceut­icals to Bollywood films,” said Sang Baichuan, director of the Institute of Internatio­nal Business at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics in Beijing.

“In addition to jointly ensuring the multilater­al trade system, it is also meaningful for the two countries to expand their economic activities, due to the divergence of the structure of products between China and India and their leading economic positions in Asia,” Sang said.

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