Q. As India re-imagines its neighborhood, cross-border connectivity through sub-regions is becoming increasingly vital. Analyze.

Approach:

  • Start by introducing recent developments in a step towards sub-regional connectivity.
  • Highlight the various steps taken in sub-regional connectivity along with India’s approach.
  • Elaborate on the importance of sub-regional connectivity for India in its neighborhood.
  • Briefly highlight the challenges associated and give a suitable way forward.

Answer:

The idea of re-integrating India’s neighborhood through a sub-regional approach began to emerge in the late 1990s, but it was only in the mid-2000s that a sustained push for sub-regional connectivity started to take concrete shape.

Recently, marking 50 years of Bangladesh’s independence, India and Bangladesh made a joint decision to explore sub-regional connectivity initiatives with additional road and railway connectivity links to Nepal as well as rail links to Bhutan via Indian Territory.

Various steps taken in sub-regional connectivity

  • BBIN (Bangladesh, Bhutan, India and Nepal) sub-regional Motor Vehicle Agreement (MVA). In 2015 bringing together the Bay of Bengal and the Himalayan sub-regions.
  • The India-Myanmar-Thailand Trilateral Highway project and the sea-river-land Kaladan Multi-Modal Transit Transport Project aims to develop transport infrastructure in western Myanmar and North-eastern India forms the key connectivity projects in linking India with that Mekong subregion.
  • Chabahar agreement between Afghanistan, India, and Iran aims to fulfill the idea of building a sub-region around the Arabian sea.

Importance of sub-regional connectivity for India in its neighborhood

To boost trade & commerce

  • Transport corridors are the arteries through which trade, commerce and people flow within and across countries.
  • They become platforms for reducing poverty, generating employment and promoting sustainable development by creating new economic opportunities for the countries being connected.
  • For example, seamless transport connectivity between India and Bangladesh has the potential to increase national income of Bangladesh by 17 percent and 8 percent in India.
  • Further, improved transport connectivity between India and Bangladesh could increase India’s export by 172 percent while Bangladesh’s export to India could almost rise 3 times.

Geostrategic response to China

  • China has massively expanded its diplomatic, economic, and political footprint across South Asia.
  • India needs to rethink its strategy because the default outcome of what the BRI is likely to accomplish in India’s periphery is its steady economic integration with China and the marginalization of India in its own neighborhood.
  • India is the largest transit country in the subcontinent and India’s geographic location and size makes it a natural connector for its immediate neighbors and beyond.

Countering terrorism and extremism

  • Improved sub-regional connectivity can also help counter terrorism and extremism by promoting greater understanding and cooperation between neighboring countries and by reducing the opportunities for extremist groups to operate across borders.

Better diplomatic relations in region

  • Better connectivity in India’s sub-regions will support the idea of wider integration between South Asia, Southeast Asia, West Asia, Central Asia, eastern Africa, and the Indian Ocean where India can take the leading role.

Foster Cultural exchange

  • Sub-regional connectivity will increase India’s engagement with other countries in its neighborhood and help in the development of the region based on the principles of cultural thinking and civilizational ethos.

Issues

India’s sub-regional approach towards its neighborhood faces several challenges such as-

  • Political instability as well as economic imbalances between countries in the region.
  • Border disputes between India and some of its neighboring countries can also pose a challenge to sub- regional initiatives, as they can create tensions and disrupt trade and investment flows.

Thus, an Indian connectivity strategy will have to consider the political, economic and cultural sensitivities of the neighboring countries. At the same time, re-integrating the subcontinent by re- discovering the old as well as building new land, sea, and riverine corridors should be a key focus. Moreover, India should invest relatively more on the soft dimensions of connectivity, including capacity building.