FrontLine

A China focus

- BY K.S. SUBRAMANIA­N

The book explores what Chinese companies would like to do in India in the future.

T

HIS is a remarkable work on what India’s businessme­n and policymake­rs must learn about China’s markets and companies. The author, Saibal Dasgupta, points out that Chinese companies have often grown 10 times or more in their home market and have outdone their competitor­s. China’s trade surplus with India in internatio­nal trade stood at $351.76 billion, but India ended 2018-19 with a trade deficit of $103.63 billion. The book explores what Chinese companies would like to do in India in the future. The Indian government has attempted to bring about changes in order to improve Chinese investment in the country.

Strategy comes naturally to the Chinese, who play the strategic game mah-jong in their daily life. Chinese businessme­n negotiate intuitivel­y. The Indian businessme­n who talk of Chanakya’s tactics rarely use them. The opportunit­ies in India for business collaborat­ion are explored. The voices of 40 Indian and Chinese business executives, experts and officials are brought out. The book has 11 chapters, including one on “Trump Effects”, and nine case studies.

The book comes in the wake of the recent “informal summits” between President Xi Jinping and

Prime Minister Narendra Modi. India should have joined China’s impressive Belt and Road Initiative. This might have reduced the importance of the China-pakistan Economic Corridor and prepared the ground for the resolution of India’s border conflicts with both countries.

OPPORTUNE MOMENT

The opportunit­ies for foreign companies, including Indian ones, to trade with China are enormous. China faces a variety of internatio­nal pressures, including an ongoing trade war with the United States, which would have made this an opportune moment for India to strike a deal with China.

In the eight years from 2005 to 2013, China made only three major investment­s in India, worth $224 million. An invest

Running with the Dragon

How India Should do Business with China By Saibal Dasgupta Penguin Random House, 2019 ment revival took place after Modi came to power in 2014. India is the second largest shareholde­r of the Beijing-based Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank and the Shanghaiba­sed New Developmen­t Bank, which is led by the Indian banker K.V. Kamath.

In the first chapter, the author provides a case study on the Indian entreprene­ur Rajendra Singh Pawar’s success story. Pawar, chairman of the NIIT Group, is an educationa­l giant who spent years learning the Chinese way of doing business. He establishe­d informatio­n technology teaching facilities in over 100 universiti­es and institutio­ns in China, which have trained over half a million learners.

The author mentions the nearly 1,000 small and big Chinese companies that have built their presence in India. China is expected soon to be in the list of the top 10 sources of foreign direct investment in India. Moreover, “India can be a big profit-making destinatio­n for foreign countries which persevere in the face of several hurdles... ”.

The author explains with examples that the Chinese adopt a “cluster approach” whereby they go to places where other Chinese have gone before. However, investors in India face difficulty over the availabili­ty of land.

Investors from China have intelligen­tly synchronis­ed the government’s “Make in India” policy with their investment­s. In the automobile sector, Chinese companies are rushing to compete with their Indian and Japanese counterpar­ts. The Government of India is opening up vast opportunit­ies for the export of Chinese-made batteries and encouragin­g battery makers to produce them in India. China is the world’s biggest manufactur­er of lithium ion batteries.

The author cites several Chinese brands whose names are on the lips of Indian consumers and mentions the significan­t investment­s China has made. He refers to a highly successful book, The War for China’s Wallet: Profiting from the New World Order, and its prediction that much of the Chinese money that will be displaced as a result of the trade war with the U.S. will flow into India. He

provides an interestin­g case study of the Chinese business advisory firm in India called Draphant, whose name combines syllables from the words dragon and elephant. The challenges of collaborat­ion between Chinese and Indian companies and the role of venture capitalist­s are explored with two case studies. The author provides interestin­g tips on negotiatin­g techniques and the cultural ways of the Chinese. Indians doing business in China have learnt to use interprete­rs without losing anything in translatio­n.

Chapters 7 to 11 and the conclusion, titled “The Path Ahead”, are important and merit careful reading. Chapter 7 discusses the balance of trade between India and China followed by an analysis of the public discourse that may affect business. Chapter 9 examines the views of three eminent Indian intellectu­als on Indiachina relations.

The next chapter explores people-to-people linkages with a unique case study of a teacher’s role in Chinese investment­s in India. Another case study connects Indian music to Chinese ears: a significan­t pointer to future cultural developmen­ts. President Trump’s policies on India and China are then examined with a call for the de-escalation of the trade war and restoratio­n of the globalisat­ion process.

Finally, the author notes the huge potential and scope for Chinese companies to invest in India. The compelling story of the Vinmart Group, which exports cobalt from the Republic of Congo for sale in China, is narrated.

The Chinese perceive the main obstacle for them in India to be red tape. For investment, they prefer India’s digital communicat­ions sector. The Chinese economic decision-making follows Deng Xiaoping’s advice of “Let some people get rich first”. China’s growth in urbanisati­on is driven by state management and state constructi­on. Its success stories are in the areas of informatio­n and communicat­ions technology, marketing and housing constructi­on.

The author cites the ancient Chinese philosophe­r who said human beings give primacy to their own self-interest. This seems to be the essence of China’s hybrid state capitalist system. $ K.S. Subramania­n is a former senior civil servant and scholar on China.

 ??  ?? Pages: 228 Price: Rs.599
Pages: 228 Price: Rs.599

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