China
and India launched a Strategic Economic Dialogue on Monday in a sign that both
Asian powers are seeking closer economic ties despite differences over issues
such as South China Sea disputes.
Analysts said that the dialogue will
strengthen economic development and their sway over international affairs, such
as the European sovereign debt crisis.
"A closer economic relationship between
China and India will not only have a profound effect on our two countries, but
also boost the confidence of developing countries as a whole," said Zhang
Ping, minister of the National Development and Reform Commission, at the
dialogue's opening ceremony.
Montek Singh Ahluwalia, deputy head of India's
Planning Commission, said that the dialogue would bolster economic engagement.
The countries are already working closely together under groups such as the G20
and BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) and both need to
address challenges together, he said.
A range of issues, from economic cooperation
to the global situation, were discussed.
Agreement was reached on deepening investment
cooperation, opening markets wider and improving the investment environment,
according to a statement on the Indian embassy website in China.
Increasingly crucial sectors, such as
railways, water conservation, the environment and renewable energy found the
countries in broad agreement.
E B Rajesh, the Shanghai-based chief
representative of the Confederation of Indian Industry, called the dialogue a
"confidence-building platform".
"Communication between the two countries
was insufficient ... such a dialogue is needed," he said.
"The dialogue will help Indian
enterprises find more business opportunities in China," said Liu Xiaoxue,
a researcher with the Institute of Asia-Pacific Studies at the Chinese Academy
of Social Sciences.
It's also an opportunity for China to discuss
hurdles its enterprises face in investing in India. For example, last year
India imposed restrictions on imports of Chinese IT equipment citing security,
victimizing major Chinese companies such as Huawei Technologies.
Increased economic ties will help stabilize
the regional situation, despite recent differences over oil exploration in the
South China Sea, some experts said.
According to recent Indian media reports, the
country's state oil company, ONGC Videsh Ltd, plans to explore for oil in
disputed waters.
"Both countries realize cooperation is
more beneficial," said Yang Baojun, an East Asian professor at Peking
University.
"Benefits from stronger economic ties
outweigh their differences."
Bilateral trade has risen rapidly, Liu said.
In 2010 it stood at US$61.76 billion, up 42.4
percent year-on-year, with exports to India growing 31.3 percent and imports
increasing 51.8 percent.
In the first eight months of this year, trade
amounted to US$48.16 billion, up 19.4 percent compared to the same period last
year.
The cooperation is significant, especially at
a time when the global economy is battered by the European debt crisis,
uncertain US economic prospects, inflation and capital inflows facing the
emerging economies, analysts said.
The dialogue should address whether and how
they could rescue Europe, Yang said. "They should first analyze the
situation (in Europe) carefully before taking any cooperative measures,"
he said.
The one-day dialogue was initiated by Premier
Wen Jiabao and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
The second India-China Strategic Economic
Dialogue will be held next year.
Lan Lan and Guo Ji
China Daily
Business & Investment Opportunities
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