Global Times

India wins in China-US dispute

Deal with Washington could interrupt export trend

- By Li Xuanmin

India appears to be a winner from the ongoing China-US trade war, with its exports to China, driven by rises in agricultur­al products, marine products, and chemical products, set for a record in the 2018-19 fiscal year, which ends on March 31.

But will the momentum be sustained throughout 2019?

Given Indian products’ low competiven­ess in price as well as hefty transporta­tion costs, the extent of the country’s potential exports to China still largely hinges on the outcome of the China-US trade talks, industry observers said.

A resolution between the world’s two largest economies could cut Chinese demand for Indian goods that would otherwise serve as substitute­s for US products, they added.

Between April and December in 2018, Indian’s exports to China were $12.7 billion, close to the $13.33 billion recorded in the full 2017 fiscal year, according to a statement by India’s Ministry of Commerce and Industry that was released on February 8.

The jump in exports narrowed India’s trade deficit with China to about $40 billion, the Global Times learned.

The export expansion has been driven by marine products, organic chemicals, plastics, petroleum products, grapes and rice, said the statement, which also mentioned India is specifical­ly taking note of opportunit­ies in sectors “where the US would lose competiven­ess in China and where India has export potential.”

Amid the US-provoked trade war, China has imposed retaliator­y tariffs on imports from the US since July, which drove up the prices of US goods and prompted Chinese companies to turn to alternativ­e import sources to boost their inventorie­s.

India, as a vast agricultur­al country, has witnessed steady growth in exports to China since last year, especially in farm and marine products such as rice, soybeans, fruit and corn in addition to traditiona­l exports of chemical products, Zhao Gancheng, director of the Center for Asia-Pacific Studies at the Shanghai Institute for Internatio­nal Studies, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

Despite the seemingly promising prospects, some analysts said that boosting imports from India was a way for China to solve an urgent matter rather than a long-term strategy.

“If the China-US standoff persists, India could steer away from its disadvanta­ges in exports and further tap the opportunit­y to foster closer trade ties with China,” Liu Xiaoxue, an associate research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences’ National Institute of Internatio­nal Strategy, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

Chinese trade officials are set to hold a new round of trade talks with the US from Thursday to Friday, days ahead of a March 1 deadline.

“But if the China-US trade talks yield a positive result, India won’t be able to sustain its new export drive this year,” Zhao said.

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