It is hard to find anyone willing to say — on the record — that anything could be wrong with the relationship between India and the US. Over the past 20 years, the world’s two largest democracies have grown steadily closer. But, the truth is that this has happened in spite of the economic linkages between the two countries, not because of them.
The last few years have been particularly bad and they have just been capped by news that US President Donald Trump intends to remove imports from India (and Turkey) from the Generalised System of Preferences programme that allowed some goods tariff-free access to US markets.
India has downplayed the move, claiming that the GSP only provided $190 million or so worth of benefits to Indian exports. But, this is misleading. India was the largest beneficiary of the GSP scheme, with about $5.6 billion worth of its imports qualifying. Many of these will lose a crucial degree of competitiveness as a consequence of Trump’s decision — particularly when compared to competitors from countries such as Mexico that have free trade agreements with the US.
The US administration’s argument is simple: India is not lowering its trade barriers enough. To the contrary, it is raising new ones. US dairy imports into India aren’t being allowed for religious reasons by a government that has increasingly focused on protecting the sacred cow. New Delhi is worried, for example, that American cows may have been given bovine somatotropin, a growth hormone that is extracted from the pituitary gland of other cattle.
India’s crackdown on US-made cardiac stents mobilised yet another American sector, medical equipment. And the last straw may well have been India’s aggressive moves against US tech giants, forcing many of them to store data on Indian servers. Its also constantly changing rules to make it harder for foreign online retailers such as Amazon.com Inc. to operate in India.
India’s turn towards protectionism may have gone relatively unremarked in the rest of the world so far, but there was always going to be damaging blowback.
Many of the exporters that will suffer as a consequence of the GSP withdrawal are in sectors such as engineering — precisely the sort of value-added manufacturing businesses that India needs to see more of if it is to create jobs for the millions of young people who join its workforce yearly.
Indian exports have done remarkably poorly under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who was elected five years ago amid widespread expectations of an economic revival. Exports have, in real terms, been largely flat over his term.
This should be a wake-up call for the government. The world trading system is in a state of flux. The weight of China’s manufacturing sector has bent it out of shape. Now it is being hammered into a new configuration. An India that is busy putting up barriers will be in no position to benefit.
China factor
Compared to China, India is still a largely poor, developing country. It naturally should be allowed to benefit from the special arrangements set up for such economies but won’t if it tries to throw its weight around on the assumption that it is the only game in town. Manufacturing that is moving away from China doesn’t need to shift to an India that is notoriously unfriendly to foreign business. It can go elsewhere — and is doing so, to Bangladesh or countries in South-East Asia such Vietnam. Both those nations have seen exports grow at a smart pace while India’s have stagnated.
The US, too, is missing a trick. A Trump administration obsessed with fixing trade with China needs allies — and not just in the developed world; alienating India is an extremely short-sighted strategy. Washington would be wise to retain a sense of proportion: India’s trade surplus with the US is a measly $23 billion — barely seven per cent of China’s $323 billion.
If Washington wants to force Beijing to play by the rules, India could help. Instead, the impression the US is giving is that any attempt to fix the trading system to spread the benefits more fairly will end up hurting India.
Both India and the US need to think harder about what they want to get out of each other. The US needs to remember that a close relationship with a prosperous India is the best way to ensure the survival of a world order that has long benefited the US above all. And New Delhi needs to remember that the US can only be pushed so far — and that India’s own best interests lie in participating fully in the trading system that has made so many other countries rich.
Bloomberg
Comments
Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.
We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of TheHindu Businessline and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.