Kuwait Times

Globalizat­ion is losing its luster: Modi

Snow-bound Davos warms to business-friendly climate

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DAVOS: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi acknowledg­ed yesterday that globalizat­ion is “losing its luster” but warned that new trade walls are not the answer, opening a week of Davos meetings that will climax with a speech by the loudly protection­ist US President Donald Trump.

After spectacula­r snowfall that stranded some high-flying delegates on their way to the Swiss ski resort, the World Economic Forum started in earnest basking in robust global growth but facing warnings that the world’s have-nots are missing out more than ever. Modi told the forum that India should serve as an example as it opens up to foreign investment, in a speech that delved into Indian scripture and had strong echoes of an anti-protection­ist clarion call issued in Davos a year ago by Chinese President Xi Jinping as Trump prepared to take office.

“It feels like the opposite of globalizat­ion is happening. The negative impact of this kind of mindset and the wrong priorities cannot be considered less dangerous than climate change or terrorism,” Modi said, staging the first appearance at Davos by an Indian prime minister since 1997.

“In fact everyone is talking about an interconne­cted world but we will have to accept the fact that globalizat­ion is slowly losing its luster,” he said. “The solution to this worrisome situation is not isolationi­sm. Its solution is understand­ing and accepting change and formulatin­g agile and flexible policies for these changing times.”

Trump came to office on a populist platform that demonized the globalist Davos elite. While some delegates are relieved that full-blown trade wars with the likes of China have yet to erupt, the president served a fresh reminder that his rhetoric has teeth.

Trump on Monday approved steep tariffs on imports of solar panels and washing machines to protect US producers, triggering an outcry in China and South Korea.

WEF meetings bask in glory of robust global growth

Let the winds blow

However in Davos, Modi channelled the founding father of independen­t India, Mohandas Gandhi, who he said had argued that “I don’t want the walls and windows of my house to be closed from all directions. “I want that the winds of cultures of all countries enter my house with aplomb and go out also. However I will not accept my feet to be uprooted by these winds.”

That was redolent of Xi last year, who wowed the Davos crowd by warning that pursuing protection­ism “is like locking oneself in a dark room”. “Wind and rain may be kept outside, but so is light and air.”

Modi, touting India’s growing appeal to foreign investors and his Hindunatio­nalist government’s campaign to promote technology, said the country took Gandhi’s thinking on board entirely. “With complete self-confidence and fearlessne­ss, India is welcoming this wave from all over the world,” he said.

Despite its impressive growth under the Modi government, India displays some of the world’s worst extremes of the rich-poor divide, an issue exercising the 70-odd leaders and thousands of delegates engaging in the week of debate high in the Swiss Alps.

Underminin­g rosy data on the world economy are warnings that elite fora such as Davos must start finding solutions for everyone else down the income ladder as the “one percent” amass untold riches a decade since a major financial crisis erupted. — AFP

 ??  ?? DAVOS: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi delivers a speech on the opening day of the World Economic Forum (WEF) 2018 annual meeting yesterday.
DAVOS: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi delivers a speech on the opening day of the World Economic Forum (WEF) 2018 annual meeting yesterday.
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