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Is India’s Africa policy working?

“…Africa will be at the top of our priorities,”[1] Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in his address in the Ugandan parliament on 25 July 2018. Four years into the present government’s five-year term, New Delhi is adopting a laudably determined approach to deepening the partnership.

India’s engagement with Africa, especially at a time when the partner region’s geopolitical and geoeconomic situation is changing, deserves serious consideration. Africa is increasingly being viewed as a land of opportunity and promise, not a region of conflict and poverty as before.

Every major player – China, Japan, the United States, Russia, the Association of South East Asian Nations, besides the former colonial nations – is enhancing cooperation with it. As the second most important Asian power and the world’s fastest growing economy, India naturally has significant stakes in Africa’s stability, security and development. But separately, this country’s track record as a successful democracy and development model are relevant to African nations. They, in turn, are well-positioned to offer India their markets and resources, while also building up food and energy security for both sides.

The China factor

Africa has welcomed India’s overtures in enriching cooperation, oblivious to the element of India-China competition in the region that is keeping agog sections of the western and Indian media and experts. Africa needs multiple partners and is understandably disinclined to pick one country over another.

New Delhi has always held that India’s relations with Africa – rooted in history and, therefore, unique – stand on their own: competition with other countries has no part in it though public perception may run to the contrary.[2]

Those given to such comparisons need to remind themselves that China’s economy is about five times bigger than that of India’s today — a critical fact, bearing on the size of the two countries’ respective footprints on the African continent. (This explains why India, while moving on its own steam, has also striven to craft trilateral partnerships with the U.S., Japan and others to leverage available opportunities.)

Key elements

Some more key facts, objectively evaluated, will help us assess the impact and effectiveness of India’s Africa policy. For example:

The way forward

The Indian prime minister spelt out recently the “10 Principles” that will continue to guide India’s engagement with Africa.[4] Mutual benefit should sustain these efforts. The main facets of India’s Africa strategy should be to: a) motivate and enable India Inc to step up its trade and investment exchanges; b) impress upon stakeholders the need to make project management speedier and more effective; and c) develop an ambitious plan to strengthen the people-to-people connect.

Only then will the India-Africa partnership start moving towards harnessing its full potential.

Rajiv Bhatia is Distinguished Fellow, Gateway House and a former High Commissioner to South Africa, Lesotho and Kenya. He writes regularly on African developments and India-Africa relations.

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References

[1] Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India, Prime Minister’s address at Parliament of Uganda during his State Visit to Uganda July 25, 2018, < http://www.mea.gov.in/Speeches-Statements.htm?dtl/30152/Prime_Ministers_address_at_Parliament_of_Uganda_during_his_State_Visit_to_Uganda>

[2] This position was aptly articulated by T.S. Tirumurti, Secretary (Economic Relations) in the Ministry of External Affairs, who in course of a media briefing on 20 July 2018, stated: “As regards China, I don’t think we see ourselves in a competition with China in Africa at all. Our relations with African countries go back very, very long way, goes back to history, goes back to Mahatma Gandhi, goes back to Apartheid and now it is on a very solid foundation of development cooperation and security and other cooperation, which is enlarging. So, I don’t think we look at relations with African countries through the perspective of relations with another country.

Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India, Media Briefing by Secretary (ER) on Prime Minister’s upcoming visit to Rwanda, Uganda and South Africa (July 20, 2018), < http://www.mea.gov.in/media-briefings.htm?dtl/30140/Media_Briefing_by_Secretary_ER_on_Prime_Ministers_upcoming_visit_to_Rwanda_Uganda_and_South_Africa_July_20_2018>

[3] Sources of data are Expo-Import Databank, Dept. of Commerce, Ministry of Commerce and Industry, Government of India as well as Export-Import Bank of India.

[4] Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India, Prime Minister’s address at Parliament of Uganda during his State Visit to Uganda July 25, 2018, < https://www.mea.gov.in/Speeches-Statements.htm?dtl/30152/Prime_Ministers_address_at_Parliament_of_Uganda_during_his_State_Visit_to_Uganda >