| In contrast, the agreement on bilateral co-operation in civilian nuclear energy appears to hold more substantive promise, even though India's nuclear energy deal with the US is in trouble. It is true that the vision document predicates the Indo-Chinese co-operation in civilian nuclear energy on the two countries meeting their respective international commitments. But what has been released goes beyond what the Chinese prime minister declared in Singapore a few months ago. China is a member of the Nuclear Suppliers Group; by agreeing to co-operate with India in this area, it is sending out a positive signal on its likely stance in the NSG forum, on the question of allowing India access to uranium for its nuclear power projects. |
| On the economic front, the vision document refers to the findings of a joint feasibility study that favours a regional trade agreement between India and China. A joint economic group has already been constituted to explore the possibilities of such an agreement. Indian industry remains nervous about rising imports from China, especially since the rupee has moved up more than the yuan in the last year and also because the logic of Chinese pricing of manufactured products remains a mystery to many Indian companies. In other words, any version of a free trade agreement is problematic if the two systems are playing by different rules. Against this backdrop, the Indian government's move to enter into a regional trading agreement with China should be seen as only a first step, and there can be little doubt that it will hasten slowly. What is encouraging in this context is that the yuan has in fact moved up against the dollar by a few percentage points in recent months. |
| The vision document is interesting in what it says on the contentious border question, especially in the context of Indian perceptions that China has resiled to some degree from the 2005 agreement on not exchanging settled populations when it came to the boundary settlement. The vision document seeks fair, reasonable and mutually acceptable solutions, based on the guiding principles announced in 2005. Does that contain a hint of Chinese accommodation of Indian concerns? |
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