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Global Times: US’ attempt to pit India against China undermines global recovery

walterbibikow

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While the world economy is grappling with difficulties including high inflation, geopolitical struggles and the pandemic, it is widely accepted that Asia will remain the main engine of global economic growth in 2023, with China and India being the main drivers. The two countries have massive potential to cooperate and jointly contribute more to global development; however, hurdles for such cooperation are rising, as the US steps up its attempt to loop India into its containment strategy against China.

The IMF said on Tuesday that China and India will account for half of global economic growth this year as the multilateral agency raised its 2023 global growth outlook to 2.9 percent from the previous forecast of 2.7 percent growth. “India remains a bright spot. Together with China, it will account for half of global growth this year, versus just a tenth for the US and euro area combined,” the IMF said in its latest update to the biannual World Economic Outlook.

So far, despite views still being divided over the performance of the US and European economies this year, confidence in the Chinese and Indian economies seems unquestionable.

Specifically, with China's optimization of anti-COVID-19 response, economic activity and normal life have been revived, with the domestic consumption recovering at an astonishing speed during the Chinese New Year holidays. The faster-than-expected recovery in China's consumer market will be a pillar boosting its economic recovery, which many financial institutions expect will achieve a growth of more than 5 percent in 2023.

India’s economic growth for 2023 is expected to reach 6.1 percent, according to the IMF forecast. That means the South Asian nation will remain the fastest-growing economy in the world with the current estimates surpassing overall growth in emerging and developing economies in Asia.

Under such circumstances, the crux for the global economic recovery this year hinges in large part on the question as to whether the growth opportunities brought by China and India could inject sufficient impetus into the world economy. For anyone with the basic knowledge of global economic and trade landscape, it is not hard to tell how strengthened cooperation with such robust economies as China and India could help the world weather difficult times.

Yet, it is important to note that closer economic cooperation should be based on economic considerations, and never geopolitical struggles. At present, the US’ push for a technological "decoupling" and abnormal transfer of industrial chains is becoming one of the biggest worries for the global economic recovery in 2023. For instance, the IMF said in its staff report in mid-January that after decades of increasing global economic integration, the world is facing the risk of fragmentation, which could reduce global economic output by up to 7 percent. And with the addition of technological "decoupling," the loss in output could reach 8 to 12 percent in some countries, it warned.

This is exactly why the latest partnership between the US and India seems to be adding to such concerns, instead of optimism, about regional economic development. The White House launched a partnership with India on Tuesday that President Joe Biden hopes will help the countries compete against China on military equipment, semiconductors and artificial intelligence, Reuters reported.

Apparently, the US’ attempt to integrate India into its supply and industrial chains is aimed at ensuring its own dominance in some key sectors by substituting China's position in the global industrial chains. If global cooperation continues to be hijacked by the US geopolitical calculations, it will not only lead to the "decoupling" and restructuring of global industrial chains, but also affect India's own development, to the detriment of the global economic recovery.

This is because if the Indian economy fares in the direction set by the US, it will become increasingly dependent on the US. There is no denying that India needs the US as a big market, which is why US-India trade has grown relatively rapidly in recent years. But the further development of the Indian economy, especially the upgrading of the Indian manufacturing sector, requires thorough reforms of the Indian economy itself, not the US’ “help.” An overreliance on the US will hinder reform efforts in India, as reflected in the experiences of many developing economies, which ends up undermining the competitiveness of India’s own national manufacturing sector.
 
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US' political trick to coax India to contain China's tech rise 'wishful thinking'

The US is enlisting India to join its small circle to contain China's technology rise by launching the US-India initiative on Critical and Emerging Technology (iCET), but Chinese experts play down Washington's "wishful thinking" as non-aligned India is unlikely to follow the US' playbook.

The experts called on India to keep distance from the US, while conduct pragmatic cooperation with China
, as they have complementary economic structures and similar domestic situations to jointly promote bilateral and regional economic development.

The White House announced on Tuesday that it held a meeting with India on iCET in Washington that day. Through the initiative, the two countries will cooperate in defense, semiconductors, space, rare-earth processing technologies and other high-tech sectors, according to a statement released by the US government.

The meeting came after US President Joe Biden and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the initiative in May 2022. Though China wasn't mentioned by the White House in the statement, the initiative is widely believed at competing against China.

"The larger challenge posed by China… its efforts to dominate the industries of the future and to control the supply chains of the future, have had a profound impact on the thinking in Delhi," said White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan.

"The US wants to kill two birds with one stone by luring India to join its initiative to contain China's tech rise," Lou Chunhao, executive director of the Institute of South Asian Studies at the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

On the one hand, the iCET is part of the US strategy to encircle China by pressing other countries to pick sides and form small circles that exclude China, as the US sees China as its primary rival, Luo said.

On other hand, the US aims to take advantage of the discord that has emerged between China and India over recent years to fan flames in the China-India relationship and reduce India's reliance on Russia, according to Lou.

However, there are many divergences between the US and India when it comes to economic issues, tariffs and data transfers. Former US president Donald Trump repeatedly accused India of being the "tariff king," Lou noted.

There are favorable conditions for the US and India to strengthen high-tech research and development, such as many Indian-American technology experts now working in the US and India's language advantage.

But given India's lagging industrial infrastructure, there will be only a small scale of high-tech manufacturing cooperation, said He Weiwen, a senior fellow at the Center for China and Globalization.

The initiative may prove to be only American "wishful thinking", as India is unlikely to undermine its non-aligned position to simply follow the US, He told the Global Times on Wednesday. "Like many European countries, India will not choose sides between China and the US. Instead, New Delhi will make independent decisions in light of its own interests," he said.

Although India joined the US-initiated Indo-Pacific Economic Framework, it opted to stay out of a joint declaration on the trade pillar of the framework. Meanwhile, India has ramped up purchases of Russian oil despite sweeping Western sanctions imposed on Russia, indicating disagreement in their respective interests.

China and India are neighbors and the two most populous emerging market economies, while their similar domestic situations and complementary economic structures could bring more cooperation.

Despite external challenges, their bilateral trade hit a record high of $135.98 billion in 2022, reflecting strong resilience in China-India economic relationship, according to Chinese customs data.

He said that China should continue to actively promote mutually beneficial economic cooperation with India, and through specific projects to make India realize that cooperation with China is indispensable.

@Skull and Bones @VkdIndian @Hellfire2006 @Cheepek @SeaMermaid @Raj-Hindustani @Hecig @Paitoo :omghaha: :dirol::haha::sarcastic::pleasantry:
 
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US is trying to seduce India hard to counter China. Modi/India is smart. We will happily be non-aligned.
As Indian Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar put it India never had ‘NATO mentality’.

i doubt we will ever see a full scale war between China vs India or China vs US/Taiwan. China will have too much to lose. All of their external trade depends on US, EU and India. Their economy would die overnight and they will become another Russia/North Korea.

Another point, Do you guys really think China would support Pakistan over India in a war? China will have more to loose if they stopped trading with India. Real politick says they will continue trading with India if push comes to shove.
 
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West is the only source for high tech manufacturing and outsourcing. China didn’t even allowed Indian IT industries to establish a foothold in their country. I’m not suggesting alienating China from Indian economic activity altogether, but co-operation with China has its own disadvantages.
 
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West is the only source for high tech manufacturing and outsourcing. China didn’t even allowed Indian IT industries to establish a foothold in their country. I’m not suggesting alienating China from Indian economic activity altogether, but co-operation with China has its own disadvantages.

The one thing China can't copy was the Indian IT industry, since it requires people skills
 
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US is pitting the world against China, but they doom to fail.
 
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US is trying to seduce India hard to counter China. India is smart
Do Western countries have captured India's land in Aksai Chin? Is it Western countries which is continously vetoing 🇮🇳 attempt to designate Pakistan based terrorist as global terrorist? Is it western countries which is supplying warships, tanks, artillery, fighters to our beloved neighbours? Is it Western countries which attacked our unarmed and outnumbered soldiers at Galwan Valley? Is it Western countries which is not allowing Indian goods to enter into their market? Is it Western countries which is threatening to cut off North East from mainland India by invading Siliguri corridor? Is it Western countries which is sending ISR ships to Sri Lanka to spy on our naval bases in South India?
 
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