Hindustan Times (Patiala)

CHINA MODEL INSPIRES NITI AAYOG’S 3YEAR ACTION PLAN

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The government is looking up to China to give a fillip to India’s economy.

Or so it seems. There are 67 references to “China” and “Chinese” in the Three-Year Action Agenda: 2017-18 to 2019-20 prepared by the government think tank Niti Aayog. The agenda, released by finance minister Arun Jaitley on August 24, not only hails and acknowledg­es China’s economic muscle but also highlights how India comes up short.

China may not be the most neighbourl­y neighbour – Doklam standoff is in its third month — but it is the world’s second biggest economy and has a lot going for it.

The agenda underscore­s the need to “replicate” China’s very large special economic zones along its coasts.

The government is looking up to China to give a fillip to India’s economy.

Or so it seems. There are 67 references to “China” and “Chinese” in the Three-Year Action Agenda: 2017-18 to 2019-20 prepared by the government think tank Niti Aayog.

The agenda, released by finance minister Arun Jaitley on August 24, not only hails and acknowledg­es China’s economic muscle but also highlights how India comes up short.

China may not be the most neighbourl­y neighbour – Doklam standoff is in its third month — but it is the world’s second biggest economy and has a lot going for it. From special economic zones to job creation, from world-class universiti­es to modern cities, from communicat­ion technology to soft power – the Niti Aayog, which is chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, has taken note of it all.

The agenda underscore­s the need to “replicate” China’s very large special economic zones along its coasts by developing two employment zones on India’s east and west coasts.

For Make in India to succeed, the country would have to manufactur­e for a global market, as China and some other countries do. But for that, Indian products have to be competitiv­e, it says. The Shenzhen model of urbanisati­on could inspire smart cities. Shenzhen used to be an unremarkab­le town until 40 years ago but an urbanisati­on push transforme­d it into a megacity, one of China’s wealthiest. Highlighti­ng the role exports play in increasing productivi­ty, employment and wages, the document says there are only four developing countries — China, Taiwan, Singapore and South Korea — that “successful­ly transforme­d themselves” within three decades. But China, with a population similar to India, is most comparable.

“In 2015, the world merchandis­e exports amounted to $16.6 trillion. China accounted for 13.72% of these exports and India only 1.67%,” says the report. The Aayog’s governing council, including Modi, many Union ministers and chief ministers, deliberate­d on the draft document in April.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India