Is it possible for India Inc to disentangle itself from China?

Is it possible for India Inc to disentangle itself from China?



Can India Inc extricate itself from ‍China?

CHINA AND ⁤India ⁢are not on​ the friendliest of terms. In 2020 ⁣their ⁤soldiers clashed along their disputed border in the deadliest confrontation between the two⁤ since ‍1967—then clashed ‍again in 2021⁤ and 2022. That has made⁢ trade between the Asian giants a tense affair. Tense but, especially for India, still‍ indispensable. Indian consumers rely on cheap Chinese goods, and Indian companies rely on cheap Chinese inputs, particularly in industries⁢ of the ⁤future. Whereas India sells China the products of the old economy—crustaceans, cotton, granite, diamonds, petrol—China sends‌ India memory⁣ chips, integrated circuits and pharmaceutical ingredients. As‍ a result, trade is ‍becoming ever more lopsided.⁤ Of the $117bn in goods that flowed between the two countries in 2022, 87% came from China⁤ (see chart). ​

A convoluted licensing regime gives Indian authorities more ways to stymie Chinese⁢ business. In⁢ April 2020 ‌India‌ declared that investments from‍ countries sharing a border with it must receive special approvals. No specific neighbour‌ was named but the target was ‌clearly China. Since then India has approved less than a quarter of⁢ the 435‌ applications ​for foreign direct investment from ⁣the ⁤country. According to Business Today, a local outlet, only three received the ‌thumbs-up in India’s ⁢last fiscal year, which ended in March. Last month reports surfaced that a proposed joint‌ venture between BYD and Megha Engineering, an Indian industrial firm,⁢ to build electric​ vehicles and batteries failed to win approval‍ over security ⁢reasons.⁣

Luxshare, a big ‍Chinese manufacturer of ⁣devices ​for, among others, Apple, has yet to open a factory in Tamil Nadu, despite signing an ‌agreement with the state in 2021. The reason for the delay is believed to be⁣ an unspoken blanket ban from the central government in Delhi ‌on new facilities owned by ⁤Chinese companies. In⁤ early August⁢ the ‍often ⁢slow-moving Indian parliament whisked through a new law ⁤easing…

2023-08-14⁣ 14:34:01
Post‌ from www.economist.com
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