CHINA & INDIA: Reality behind Statistics
By B. Raman
A purely statistical analysis can be misleading. The
current euphoria over the expanding Sino-Indian economic
relations, the galloping bilateral trade and the mushrooming
analytical studies triggered off by this euphoria are coming
in the way of an adequate focus on certain emerging
characteristics of these relations, which have already
started redounding more to the benefit of China than
of India. These characteristics could have positive as well
as negative impact on the over-all Sino-Indian relations.
2. The first emerging characteristic is that China is
increasingly the beneficiary of the expanding Sino-Indian
economic relations during the last five years just as it has
been the major beneficiary of the expanding Sino-US economic
relations during the last two decades. Initially, as India
and China embarked on their policy of expanding bilateral
trade, India benefited more than China because of growing
Chinese demands for iron ore for its steel industry.
Consequently, in the first four or five years after this
expansion started, the balance of trade was in favour of
India. This balance in favour of India quietened fears of a
possible dumping of moderately-priced Chinese goods into the
Indian market.
3. Now, there is a greater flow of goods and services
from China to India than the other way round. The result:
the balance of trade is increasingly in favour of China. The
large manufacturing base in China enables it to offer a
large basket of manufactured goods to the Indian market. The
inadequate development of the Indian manufacturing sector is
coming in the way of expanding the basket of Indian
exports to China, which continue to depend on raw
materials-----with iron ore constituting nearly 60 per cent
of our exports.
4. The galloping bilateral trade----already touching US $
40 billion and racing towards the newly-set target of US $
60 billion--- has already made China the second largest
trading partner of India after the US. More importantly, in
the coming five years, it is likely to make the Indian
market the second largest market for Chinese consumer goods
after the US market. The continued prosperity of the Chinese
manufacturing industries would depend on the continued
availability of this market.
5. This would have positive as well as negative impact
just as it has happened in the case of Sino-US economic
relations. The dependence of the Chinese manufacturing
industries on the US market has introduced a certain
moderation in Chinese policies towards the US in strategic
areas due to the Chinese anxiety to avoid unnecessary
tensions in its relations with the US in matters such as
Taiwan lest these tensions affect the trade, which is
overwhelmingly in favour of China.
6. Similarly, the growing dependence of the Chinese
manufacturing industries on the Indian market could moderate
Chinese policy-making towards India in non-economic fields.
Unnecessary political tensions in Sino-Indian relations
could affect the growing economic benefit to China arising
from the vast Indian market.
7. As against this, a likely negative impact is that the
dependence of the Indian market on Chinese manufactured
goods and the fascination of the Indian consumers for
Chinese goods could come in the way of our being able to
develop our own manufacturing industries.
8. The flood of Chinese goods flowing into the US market
is not triggering off any undue concerns -----apart from
some proforma expressions of concerns from time to time---
because both the US and China are almost equal beneficiaries
of the expanding economic relations. Many of the Chinese
consumer goods flooding into the US market are manufactured
by enterprises set up in China by American capital flows. If
the Chinese are earning more money by flooding the US market
with consumer goods, the Americans are earning more money by
flooding China with American direct investment flows and
getting high returns for them.
9. This has not been happening in the case of Sino-Indian
economic relations. The trickle of Indian capital flow into
China has been in the services sector----mainly information
technology (IT). There has been hardly any Indian investment
in the sector of manufactured goods. Thus, the benefits to
China from the flow of its manufactured goods to India has
not been compensated by attractive returns for Indian
investors.
10. The second emerging characteristic is in respect of
the flow of skilled manpower. There is a greater flow of
skilled Chinese manpower to India than the other way round.
The over-fascination for the IT sector in India and the
large salaries offered by IT companies have resulted in a
distortion of our technical education system. The IT rush is
making Indian youth flock to IT training institutions and
there has been a declining interest in joining engineering
colleges to specialise in subjects unconnected with the IT
sector----such as civil, mechanical and electrical
engineering. The result: India has been producing a surplus
of excellent quality IT experts, who are able to find jobs
without problem either in India itself or abroad, but it is
no longer able to produce the required number of good
quality engineers even to meet its own needs.
11. This distortion in the technical education system has
not yet occurred in China. China's ever-increasing
investments in the infrastructure sector and the increasing
involvement of Chinese companies in foreign construction
projects----particularly in Africa---- have sustained a high
demand for good quality engineers. Chinese technical
institutions have been producing all the good quality
engineers it needs internally as well as externally.
12. The shortage of good quality engineers is going to be
increasingly felt as we embark on a programme of improving
our infrastructure. There has already been an increasing
flow of Chinese engineers into India for the execution of
the construction contracts won by them. Wherever Chinese
companies win construction contracts, they prefer to take
their own engineers in view of the language problem and also
because they have greater faith in the quality of their
engineers. In India, even if they want to employ local
engineers, they say good quality Indian engineers are in
short supply.
13. One has been seeing this second characteristic
already in the power sector where many new plants are coming
up in the private sector. Very often, the money is Indian,
but the equipment and engineers used for the construction of
these projects are Chinese. To quote from an agency report
carried by Rediff.com on January 21, 2008: "Who would have
thought a few years ago that there would be a Chinese hand
in the development of the Indian power sector? This is a
reality today. Not only is Chinese equipment being deployed
by quite a few power companies in the country, Chinese
manpower from companies such as Dongfang Electric
Corporation (DEC), Sichuan Machinery and Equipment
Corporation (SCMEC) and Shandong Electric Power Construction
Corporation (SEPCO) is employed in large numbers in the
country...... The Chinese companies want to get their own
people, because they know how to best handle the equipment
and can do it faster. This also helps the Indian companies
tide over the huge crunch in technical manpower in the
country for engineering, procurement and construction (EPC)
contracts and operations and maintenance jobs....Since
there's already a huge shortage, they are not eating into
anyone's jobs. "It is not as if they are bringing
blue-collared labourers to compete with the Indian labourers,"
said a management expert. They are bringing people at the
supervisory and engineering levels."
14. Has there been a reverse flow of Indian IT experts to
China? No. At least, not yet. Indian IT companies operating
in China tend to recruit Chinese graduates in increasing
numbers, bring them to India for improving their knowledge
of English and IT skills and then employ them in their
companies in China. Moreover, Indian IT companies in China
are not yet getting as many contracts as Chinese engineering
companies have been getting in India. The contracts procured
by the Indian IT companies are largely from Western
multinationals in China, which value their English knowledge
and IT skills.
15. The Chinese companies in India are not recruiting
Indian students, taking them to China to learn the Chinese
language and engineering skills and then employing them for
their projects in India. This is what the Russians used to
do in the 1950s and 1960s, when companies of the Soviet
Union were involved in construction projects in India. While
we are prepared to help the Chinese catch up with us in the
IT sector, they are not prepared to help us catch up with
them in the engineering sector. The Soviet Union did not
look upon India as a potential rival. The Chinese do. That
is the reality behind soothing statistics.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and,
presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai.
He is also associated with the Chennai Centre For China
Studies. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)