Will Economic Weakness Persuade China To
Trade Favours With India?
China is in economic trouble though not many analysts are
willing to say so openly.
The 12% p.a. GDP growth engine, built over 30 years, is
struggling to maintain 6%.
Its highly speculative stock market balloon refuses to
stay up, despite repeated and desperate pump-priming.
China’s massive but second-rate military machine, low on
original R&D, high on copied US and Russian designs, is becoming hard to
finance.
The country’s massive debt overhang is threatening to
engulf its economy.
The huge 1.5 billion population, held without any
political freedoms, is not amused at the dwindling economic prospects and idle
capacities.
China’s proactive overseas efforts at infrastructure building
to substitute for its nearly gone exports, have bought it many hungry
dependants in Asia, Africa and Latin America. These have generated stacks of
IOUs, but hardly any paying partners.
And yet, tonally, modern China always likes to dictate
terms.
It is probably an old affliction, coming down from the
mandarins of the “Middle Kingdom”, who famously declared the rest of the world:
barbarians.
Things did not end well for that imperial China. It was
drugged, humiliated, and carved up into spheres of Influence by the European
powers and Japan.
Then came the onset of Communism, and pride restored. And
now, towards the end of the second
decade of the 21st century, it is faltering once again.
It does have a massive economy at $12-14 trillion, second
only to the US. But China is unable to make worthy friends to partner future
growth. It only gets on with vassals. And this inability is ominous.
Its single party “Communist” political apparatus, builds
an obtuse, predatory, attitude. This is consolidating great power opinion
against China and its one-sided policies.
It won’t, for example, countenance anybody speaking of
Taiwan’s nationhood, but asserts, despite international disapproval and legal
indictment, its hegemony over the South China Sea.
It wants India to join the CPEC and use Gwadur, but
glosses over its coercive policies in Baluchistan, ignores Chabahar, and the
illegality of running the CPEC through India-owned PoK.
It runs a $52.7 billion trade deficit in China’s favour,
not unlike a similarly askew position with the US and practically every other
major trading partner.
Its FDI in India, after a six-fold increase since 2014,
still stood at under $ 1 billion ($870 million), even in 2016.
India’s exports, including IT and pharmaceuticals,
account for just $9 billion, and hordes of other things like oil seeds, tobacco
and rice suffer from lack of market access.
It claims Arunachal Pradesh and culturally and
demographically alters Tibet, with a high altitude railway, mega infrastructure
projects, airports, and floods of Han Chinese.
It warns India on the activities of the Dalai Lama with
great regularity.
It finances and trains Maoists, ULFA, Burmese insurgents
and other anti-national forces in order to blatantly subvert India.
It uses Pakistan to consolidate its hold on PoK, and
harass India in Kashmir.
China won’t agree to India’s entry into the UNSC or the NSG
using hypocritical arguments.
It backs Pakistani terrorists like Masood Azhar against
UN censure.
It backs a megalomaniacal regime in North Korea into
menacing South Korea, Japan, and threatening the world with a nuclear
holocaust.
Chinese media mouthpieces instruct India to blindly
accept capital from anyone that is offering it. This, to wrap around a plea
suggesting China would be a right partner in the modernisation of the Indian
Railways.
But what is China offering politically, let alone
economically, in return?
As for capital, it is after all also on offer from others.
But like Saudi Arabia and other oil-rich Arab states
coming to terms with their much reduced leverage in world affairs, China too
will have to come to terms with its diminishing clout.
Like Libya under Muammar Gaddafi, all Chinese efforts at
regional, let alone world domination, is doomed to fail.
China might be impressive to countries like Nepal, Sri
Lanka, Myanmar, Pakistan, but these are essentially impoverished guests at the
Chinese table.
In the larger world of real power politics, it can only
persuade an economically needy but very advanced military power like Russia to
ally with itself on a case-to-case basis.
India too cannot substantially partner with China unless
it radically changes policy.
This however may be impossible. But, history may prove
that China cannot, in the end, do much with its guns, tanks, and missiles,
after all.
The US, and the Western global powers it seeks to
displace, may force it to blink first. And this, not with its superior military
might, but using relentless economic pressure.
Meanwhile, India, the fastest growing major economy in
the world, is recognised far and wide as a wonderful and sustainable economic
opportunity. It runs a stable ship and does not lack for suitors.
China should therefore get off its bully pulpit for its
own sake. It should humble itself in order to persuade. It must trade favours
to get ahead.
Because, strategically, the crude sabre-rattling is
steadily turning India into the West’s regional bulwark in South Asia.
And nominally, it has forced India to prepare for
simultaneous aggression from both China and Pakistan.
Now, where is the commerce in that for China and its
think-tanks?
For: ABP Live
(829 words)
March 29th, 2017
Gautam Mukherjee
No comments:
Post a Comment