Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Why India needs to think beyond China’s cash clout Rlys to build station near China border in Arunachal

VYING FOR POWER India needs to implement projects it has undertaken in other countries quickly to assert its credibilit­y

- Jayanth Jacob jayanth.jacob@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Economic power is to China what military might is to the USA. Both the attributes win friends, partners and strategic footprints.

But, money often cannot get you everything in life. The rise of China, for most of its neighbours, is not a benign affair. There lies the opportunit­y for India. And the two countries making efforts to gain supremacy is the region have just got more competitiv­e.

China is a $17.6 trillion economy in purchasing power parity terms. It doesn’t have to worry about loosening the purse strings at will on neighbours and willing partners. On the other hand, India has to keep a delicate balance between her domestic developmen­t goals and internatio­nal commitment­s.

Beijing’s ability to pull off huge infrastruc­ture projects at a low cost in a shorter span of time has drawn many neighbours of India like Sri Lanka and Nepal to its fold.

New Delhi is playing its part earnestly too. After many years of neglect, Indian Ocean region is getting the focus it had long deserved. Prime Minister Narendra Modi is reading the signals well and moved in to play cultural cards like common Buddhist heritage to the hilt. Next month, Modi will be visiting Mongolia along with China and South Korea. To cash in on this, India needs to be smarter, in ways where China cannot easily outsmart her.

For example, Chinese loans are by no means cheap compared with that of multilater­al agencies. This has become a cause of some resentment. India’s model of developmen­tal partnershi­p often gets applause, before it halters on implementa­tion. That ensures India fails to leverage the goodwill it enjoys.

India moves slow in implementi­ng projects it has undertaken in most countries. The promises not kept abroad hit the image of the country. There has to be a realistic assessment before projects are announced for other countries. There also has to be streamlini­ng of the way most projects hurtle from one bureaucrat­ic hurdle to another in the government. PANAJI: Just days after it was revealed that China was planning a railway link to Nepal, defence minister Manohar Parrikar said on Saturday the Indian Railways will soon set up a station in Arunachal Pradesh near the India-China border.

“A draft of the MoU is ready and will be signed soon,” Parrikar said, adding he has spoken in detail about the project to railway minister Suresh Prabhu.

The defence minister said the “gravity” of the border issue between China and India has come down as far as Arunachal Pradesh is concerned.

The announceme­nt assumes significan­ce in view of the Chinese foreign office saying this week that the “huge dispute” over Arunachal Pradesh was an “undeniable fact”.

In the past, China has objected to any step taken by India in context of Arunachal Pradesh, including high-level visits by leaders and announceme­nt of new projects there. State-run China Daily had reported that China was planning to build a tunnel under the 8,848-metre high Mt Everest, the world’s highest peak, to extend its railway network in Nepal. IANS

 ??  ?? China’s ability to pull off huge infra projects at low cost in short span of time has drawn many neighbours of India to its fold. ARVIND YADAV/HT FILE
China’s ability to pull off huge infra projects at low cost in short span of time has drawn many neighbours of India to its fold. ARVIND YADAV/HT FILE

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