De-globalisation and India’s Strategic Position

Syllabus: Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India’s interests

Changing Global Trade Order

  • Recent U.S. tariff threats reflect bilateral coercion replacing multilateral trade discipline.
  • Globalisation is portrayed as a political system shaping markets, governance, and international engagement.
  • Liberal values of democracy and cooperation increasingly lose relevance in trade negotiations.
  • Trade is reverting to mercantilist thinking, treating surpluses as power and deficits as vulnerability.

Historical Evolution of Globalisation

  • Early global economy was force-driven, relying on domestic exploitation and overseas resource extraction.
  • Mid-20th century institutions created a normative multilateral framework for managing international affairs.
  • Sovereignty expanded faster than democracy across newly independent post-colonial states.
  • System legitimacy depended on restraint in unilateral power, framed as humanitarian or democratic pursuit.

Political Assumptions of the Liberal Order

  • Framework relied on open markets, capital mobility, and cross-border enforcement of contracts.
  • Shared resource management and negotiation mechanisms supported temporary global economic stability.
  • Many countries experienced growth and poverty reduction under this institutional arrangement.

Structural Consequences and Populist Turn

  • Returns to capital exceeded wage growth, intensifying inequality across integrated global supply chains.
  • Manufacturing declined in some regions while surging in others, reshaping labour migration patterns.
  • These imbalances triggered populist politics and inward-looking national economic strategies.

China’s Systemic Disruption

  • China integrated globally while retaining firm state control over capital, labour, and information.
  • Model relied on excess capacity and sustained external demand to maintain trade surpluses.
  • This constrained industrial ambitions of poorer economies, including India.
  • China emerged as an alternative development and governance model for global actors.

Decline of Multilateral Support

  • International aid increasingly conditional on donor country national interests.
  • Multilateral institutions struggle to enable joint negotiation on climate and illicit financial flows.
  • Developing countries face weakening collective bargaining capacity in global forums.

India’s Position and Strategic Choices

  • India is described as too large to ignore yet too poor to shape global outcomes.
  • Demographic advantage remains underutilised for productive economic capacity creation.
  • Social structure shows sharpened stratification between a narrow elite and vulnerable majority.

Domains of Selective Leadership

  • Potential strengths include digital public infrastructure, renewable energy, and services sector leadership.
  • Democratic decentralisation identified as another possible area of comparative advantage.
  • Economic growth lacks credible expansion through sustained public investment in health and education.

Governance Imperatives for Relevance

  • Low state capacity risks long-term marginalisation in a mercantilist global environment.
  • Strong institutions and broader social cohesion are necessary for inclusive growth.
  • National ambition requires institutional foundations beyond symbolic political rhetoric.

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