Hindustan Times (Noida)

On China, the trade dilemma

India must continue with do business with China, but on more favourable terms

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On Tuesday, Bloomberg, based on provisiona­l figures from the commerce ministry, reported that trade between India and China in 2020 was worth $77.7 billion. This was, do remember, a year marked by the pandemic as well as the border standoff, which had seen India consciousl­y attempt to cut down its economic linkages with China. Yet, as the report said, China, despite a dip in trade volume compared to 2019, was India’s top trading partner and Indian imports from China, at $58.7 billion, were higher than imports from the United States and the United Arab Emirates put together. The silver lining is that India’s exports to China grew 11% to a little over $19 billion.

The figures reveal four key features of India’s political economy, which will shape India’s geopolitic­al posture. First, for all the talk of selfrelian­ce as a goal, India is inextricab­ly linked to not just friendly countries but even potential adversarie­s in a complex economic web. The dependence on China for a range of goods means that Indian firms will find it hard to develop alternativ­e supply sources in quick time. Neither will Indian consumers find it easy to shift away from cheap Chinese consumer goods they have got used to. Two, the compositio­n of the trade remains a matter of deep concern — while the growth in Indian exports is positive, the trade relationsh­ip is skewed in China’s favour. This is both because of China’s unfair tariff practices and India’s own inability to compete effectivel­y.

Three, as the border stand-off eases, especially in Pangong Tso, it is unclear whether India will continue to take a strong stance on economical­ly delinking itself from China — or whether it will go back to business-as-usual. There are indication­s that progress at the border will result in a gradual, perhaps even linked, resumption of the economic relationsh­ip. But both military and economic imperative­s dictate that there shouldn’t be return to the economic status quo — and the future economic relationsh­ip must be more equal. And finally, these figures show how far India has to go in being able to develop a geopolitic­ally autonomous posture. One key reason the US has struggled to deal with an aggressive China is precisely its economic web of interdepen­dence with China. India must continue to do business with China, but on better terms, without compromisi­ng its interests.

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