China Plus One: A moving game that we could still win

Paper: GS – II, Subject: International Relations, Topic: India’s relations with great powers, Issue: Steps to leverage China plus one strategy.

Context:

The China Plus One (C+1) strategy stresses on the need to diversify global manufacturing away from China. India sees this as a strategic opportunity, but success is contingent on targeted reforms and long-term planning.

Key Highlights:

  • China’s Dominance: China currently accounts for 30% of global manufacturing which is projected to rise to 45% by 2030.
  • China Plus One Strategy: It aims to:
  • Diversify global supply chains.
  • Reduce overdependence on China.
  • It is built on three assumptions:

1.    Geopolitical diversification is sustainable.

2.    Dependence on China is risky.

3.    Supply chains are relocatable.

Challenges Facing China Plus One Paradigm:

  • Uncertainties: US tariff policy causes uncertainties with the Duties on Chinese goods could exceeding 50%. Countries like Vietnam, Thailand etc may also face up to 46%.
  • Revenue loss: Uncertainty affects C+1 countries’ long-term viability as alternatives. Thailand may lose $24 billion exports if tariffs imposed.
  • Complex interdependence: Complexity of supply chains and China’s embeddedness challenge full relocation.
  • Global shocks: Global inflation, supply shocks, and protectionism also complicate India’s path.
  • Lessons for India:
  • Certification issues: Many US imports from CPI nations still depend on Chinese intermediate goods. Thus certifying “non-Chinese origin” is getting harder. It raises trade risks for India if not properly diversified.

India’s Response – Five focus areas:

  • Expand Infrastructure: Expand beyond flagship corridors to include Last-mile connectivity, Electricity reliability, and Industrial parks for exports.
  • Strengthen Trade Diplomacy: India must sign bilateral & multilateral trade agreements with C+1 countries and expand trade deals with US, EU, Japan, etc.Need to ensure tariff stability for industries.
  • De-risk Supply Chains: India aims to reduce over-dependence on specific countries through disruptive policies an encouraging resilient and localised supply chains.
  • Improve Certification: aims to develop capacity to verify origins and supply chain traceability which is critical to avoid non-compliance with US/EU trade rules.
  • Invest in Workforce Development: As Electronics manufacturing target of $300 billion needs training of 8–10 million workers over the next decade, fixing skill gaps is vital for competitiveness.

Conclusion:

China Plus One is a time-sensitive moving window. India must act swiftly to capture lost manufacturing, balance trade competitiveness and build long-term economic resilience.

“Global trade is in flux, but we must prepare to become the world’s next factory.”

https://www.pressreader.com/india/mint-chennai/20250703/282097757705095?srsltid=AfmBOopfg0jhYff3d81uNeHB3J2Ld21RS9xsSSfCkouG5MzqnmTSllwJ

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