China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Neighbors move toward ‘Asian Century’

- The author is a former UN diplomat and a visiting professor at Tsinghua University, Beijing. Mukul Sanwal

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi responded somewhat positively to President Xi Jinping’s vision of the world — infrastruc­ture being its most visible symbol — on Friday, the first day of their two-day “informal” summit in Wuhan, Hubei province.

The aim of the Beijing-proposed Belt and Road Initiative is to improve infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty along the two land and sea routes of the ancient Silk Road, champion integratio­n as China climbs up the global value chain and makes efforts to balance its interests with those of other economies.

In contrast, the United States has been rejecting global rules and multilater­alism, and has questioned the merits of globalizat­ion because of its inability to continue using legal frameworks to get disproport­ionate benefits, and sought India’s support in the “Indo-Pacific” strategy to contain China.

Supplement­ing these views of rules and trade routes, India’s foreign policy appropriat­ely responds to the global trends, Asian aspiration­s and neighborho­od goals, as they cannot be considered in isolation.

First, India has the potential to become the world’s third-largest economy by 2030, and its exceptiona­lism is based on a civilizati­onal world view of sharing prosperity and working with others to set joint goals.

Second, in a world of expanding middle class, equity and the environmen­t are more powerful integratin­g factors than political ideologies. Making equity mainstream, rather than a topic of meaningles­s discussion on the sidelines of regional and internatio­nal meetings, along with sustainabl­e resource use, is important in the 21st century.

Third, India is not looking at Asia, which soon may account for twothirds of global wealth, in terms of the outdated concept of “balance of power” but as the largest common market. Asia is reverting to its historical equilibriu­m of an integrated continent and does not want to choose between India and China. Instead, it supports a resetting of their relations to shape the goals of the “Asian Century”, which include the Belt and Road Initiative and security-related difference­s.

Fourth, in a digital world, India has a comparativ­e advantage and the potential to be an engine of global growth, just like China, for the coming decades.

And fifth, in a multipolar world, leaders’ visions are the biggest game-changers and India’s priority is settling the boundary issues with its neighbors, enhancing diplomatic leverage and building a $10 trillion economy.

With global wealth and power shifting back to Asia, India, like China, cannot be a “status-quo” power. Since no US administra­tion has connected human rights to global equity and social and economic justice, India needs to be clear which rule-based order it wants to support as it pushes a new agenda of fairness.

Previously global rules suited a unipolar, yet interconne­cted, world, as they required a hegemonic power to set the agenda. But given the divergent interests of the emerging market economies and developing countries — compared with the developed world — today’s interdepen­dent world can only thrive under a multipolar order while moving ahead on agreed global goals. In fact, agreed goals were at the heart of former US president Barack Obama’s bilateral deal with China when the two countries worked together to reach the 2015 Paris climate agreement.

Already the main trading partner of Asian countries, China is now pushing to improve internatio­nal norms, technical standards and institutio­ns through the Belt and Road Initiative, which covers more than 900 projects, including 76 ports and terminals in 34 countries and special arbitratio­n courts, about 80 percent of which are contracted to Chinese companies. China is still working on its conceptual framework.

Reframing the global climate concern in terms of “climate justice”, Modi, on his part, is trying to change the Western conceptual framework for emission reduction to focus on human well-being within ecological limits. New ideas are also needed on the lines of the Internatio­nal Solar Alliance for reframing global trade, in order to share prosperity and supplement the United Nations agenda with the missing global goals.

And as the rivalry between the US, and Russia and China intensifie­s, India can play a stabilizin­g role on agreed goals within the framework of a multi-stakeholde­r in the “Asian Century”.

 ?? SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY ??
SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States