‘Make in India’ not protectionist, says Indian diplomat Arunish Chawla

“What India has done is a part of a careful strategy in manufacturing called Make in India," says Mr. Chawla

March 01, 2018 12:09 pm | Updated 12:11 pm IST - Washington

"We have moved away from what we called Made in India to what we now call Make in India," says Arunish Chawla, head of economic issues at the Indian Embassy in the U.S. (Representational image)

"We have moved away from what we called Made in India to what we now call Make in India," says Arunish Chawla, head of economic issues at the Indian Embassy in the U.S. (Representational image)

‘Make in India’ is not an isolationist or a protectionist strategy but it is an approach to get into the global value chain, a senior Indian diplomat has said.

Arunish Chawla, who is head of the economic issues at the Indian Embassy in the U.S., said a lot of articles were written about the recent Union Budget.

“And one of the big headlines which went around this city was ‘Is India going back to protectionism?’ The answer is a loud ‘NO’,” Mr. Chawla told a Washington audience.

“What India has done is a part of a careful strategy in manufacturing called Make in India. We have moved away from what we called Made in India to what we now call Make in India. Make in India is not an isolationist strategy. It is not a protectionist strategy. It is not even a strategy of blind import substitution. It is a strategy to get into the global value chains; to be genuinely a part of the global value chains,” Mr. Chawla said.

Participating in a panel discussion on ‘Deepening U.S.-India Trade Ties: Focus on States’ organised by the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, Mr. Chawla said that India and the United States were not horizontally competitive economies, but were vertically integrated economies.

It is important for economies of large size to reap the benefits of their market size, on their jobs growth potential by creating local ecosystems, he noted.

India, he said, offers a greater opportunity for American companies.

“American companies are welcome, they are loved in India, they are respected, their business practices are respected, and they occupy commanding heights in every sector of the Indian economy,” Mr. Chawla said, adding India is looking at ways to bring down the bilateral trade deficit.

“Our work on aerospace, defence and energy sector is beginning to take root. While trade deficit of United States with every major country increased in 2017 with India, it declined in absolute terms,” he said.

In 2017 calendar year, India-U.S. bilateral trade in goods and services reached $140 billion, Mr. Chawla said.

“This is not a small trade. It is growing double digits year on year; more than twice the rate at which the global trade is growing. As Indian economy grows and India becomes a much larger economy, the trade will grow leaps and bounds,” said the top Indian official.

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