Modi Goes To Europe To Initiate A New Season Of Bilaterals
The thing with the European Union (EU) is its mini-bus load of 27members.
This after not counting the one that recently got off, but is yet to complete
its divorce negotiations.
An outsider might be forgiven, given the names of some of them, for
thinking there are just too many freeloaders at the buffet table.
Doing a deal with Germany or France, who drive the bus at their own risk,
and a disproportionate, some would say unsupportable, share of the cost, means
you just did a deal with Malta as well.
Negotiations with Brussels however, are ponderous and reminiscent of the
once-upon-a-time Concert of Europe.
So it is significant that Prime Minister Modi has chosen to visit the three
top economies in the EU, on a bilateral basis, while missing out Brussels,
which is the seat of the EU government of 27 nations.
But Modi took care in Germany, to plump for European unity going forward,
partly because it may be what his hostess wants to hear, and partly because a
united EU offers a single market for India. At least for now.
But being told what to do by Brussels, without concomitant benefit to
British interests, may have been the very thing that prompted Brexit. Though
the officiousness of EU's Brussels HQ, located in tiny Belgium, allegedly also
played its part.
It wasn't just Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot, after all, who was often
constrained to clarify, with all the dignity he could muster, that he was
Belgian, and not French.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi was undoubtedly looking for one-on-one
gains during his calls on Berlin,
Madrid, and Paris, between the 29th of May and the 3rd of June, with a visit to
Russia in between, starting on the 31st of May.
So is the Chinese prime minister, from Germany's Numero Uno trading
partner, compared to India's 24th slot - nevertheless following hot on his
heels.
Modi thinks the time is opportune for this European visit, given the
financial strains being experienced by the EU, where even Germany is growing at
just 1.9% in GDP.
He is probably willing to trade on aspects of the Free Trade Agreement
(FTA) with the EU, stuck in limbo since 2013, if not the whole thing.
Both sides have been obdurate and self-focused, feeling justified to hold
fast. But India may have the winning hand at this juncture.
This has prompted support for its NSG bid from Germany, mutual nods on
fighting terrorism, and broad agreement on climate concerns, though short of
formal acceptance from India on the last.
But even on bilateral investment agreements, there have been problems. A
number of international arbitrations based on the recently expired one, have all gone against India. This suggests
that perhaps it was not drafted to secure Indian interests all that well, in
the first place.
Though negotiations on the EU's FTA are expected to resume in July, what
Germany, the EU's biggest economy, really wants, is a new “Investment
Protection Pact” for itself.
The old India-Germany Bilateral Investment Treaty expired in March after
India gave a one year notice, as stipulated, to end it. There are 600 joint
ventures with Germany operating in India at present and hundreds more German
companies that trade with it.
But there is also the matter of the EU proclaiming, in 2012, that its
individual members would not henceforth enter into bilateral investment
treaties.
But after Brexit, and existential threats to the EU's survival, there may
have to be a rethink on the omnibus approach that favours, say, Latvia, more
than it favours Germany.
India meanwhile, wants more of the mid-sized German engineering companies
to form joint ventures in India.
Though of long standing, India's trade with Germany is at a paltry Euro
17.4 billion in 2016. This compares badly with Germany's Euro 169.9 billion
trade with China. And moreover, this is more or less evenly balanced.
Nevertheless, Germany is now uncomfortable with China's opaque One Belt One
Road (OBOR) initiative. It does not indicate any road-map for the participation
of other countries in the contracts for all its infrastructure development.
India made clear that it wants new Make in India deals. Only, it wants them
on a bilateral basis, in a “quantum leap” of “outcome-oriented” transactions.
So, if Germany wants an Indian concession on multi-brand retail, India just
might agree as it frees up its foreign direct investment (FDI) norms, but only
in return for a clutch of strategic German engineering collaborations
back-to-back.
At this time, as many as eight broad pacts were signed but reciprocity will
be the key to operationalising them going forward. Key amongst them were ones
on “cyber politics” and “cooperation on digitalisation.”
Meanwhile, President Trump's no-holds-barred instruction to NATO to pay up
its fair share of the costs, looking squarely at Germany at the time, may be
adding urgency to the idea of expanding German presence in other markets.
While Modi visited Germany last in 2015, making little headway beyond
friendly atmospherics, this time changed circumstances could produce results.
Next, it was the first time an Indian prime minister visited Madrid in
three decades.
Here too, the most interesting pact signed was on “cyber security.”
Not only have cyber attacks been responsible for abstracting millions from
Indian banks, but they are suspected to have addled military assets like Army
mortars.
Most recently, a cyber attack is thought to be responsible for bringing
down a mechanically sound Sukhoi fighter in North East India, and its pilots,
out on a routine sortie.
Spain, the EU's third biggest economy, has also inked pacts to cooperate in
the fields of aerospace and defence with India.
Modi visited St. Petersburg after Madrid, in order to attend a Russia
sponsored International Economic Forum, and tick the box of India's 18th annual
bilateral summit with Russia. Modi is the guest of honour at this first of a
kind Russian hosted Economic Summit.
On India’s part, there is a home delegation of 60 business leaders that are
participating, with a special India Pavilion at the venue.
The key bilateral takeaway is expected to be a signing of contracts for the
Kundakulam V and VI nuclear power reactors.
The whole gamut of bilateral relations between India and Russia, is also
scheduled to be reviewed by President Putin and Prime Minister Modi, especially
in a season of shifting alliances.
With several other mega military deals in the balance, including a
state-of-the-art anti-ballistic missile shield system and several joint venture
manufacturing projects, for helicopters, battle tanks, etc. Russia will be
seeking to woo India.
In France, the EU's second placed economy, it is a first meeting between
the newly elected Emmanuel Macron, a Centrist, following on from a Socialist
Hollande, and Narendra Modi.
Paris is already in the process of supplying the first 36 state-of-the-art
Rafale fighters to India, even as a bigger contract to make hundreds more of
the Rafales in India, is being negotiated.
Macron has indicated a keenness to participate more vigorously in Modi's
Make in India programme, with other military items to join the Rafale. This
even as the French nuclear reactors on offer are found to be much too
expensive.
While sections of the international and domestic media have characterised
this quartet of visits as a "power push”, the truth may be in being at the
right places at the right time- even as outcomes are measured later.
America has signalled its unwillingness to prop up the European economy and
its security going forward. How serious it is, cannot be immediately assessed.
Still, there is something of a vacuum to be filled, and realignments to be
made.
For: The Sunday Guardian
(1,267 words)
June 1st, 2017
Gautam Mukherjee
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