New Delhi:India is not able to attract a considerable share of manufacturing companies and foreign capital that have been shifting away from China following the US-China trade tensions that erupted in 2017-18 during the then US President Donald Trump's tenure, whereas other Asian countries, particularly Vietnam, seems to have benefitted the most from US-China trade tensions, showed a study.
A study conducted by the Oxford Economics, a global economic think tank showed that between 2017 and 2023, India's total share in US imports rose by just 0.6 per cent to account for a total of 2.7 per cent of the US' global imports. During the same time, China’s share (excluding Hong Kong) in the US imports dropped by a massive eight per cent. As a result, China’s share in the US’s global imports has come down below 14 per cent from over 22 per cent.
Western companies started shifting their supply chains away from China due to the trade tensions between the world’s two largest economies, the USA and China respectively. The situation was further aggravated due to geopolitical rivalry between the two powers in the South China Sea where China has been becoming increasingly assertive vis-à-vis its neighbours such Philippines, and Vietnam among others.
India has been trying to boost its own manufacturing by attracting foreign capital and those foreign companies that have been looking away from China to shift their supply chains but the data suggests that India is not able to attract a greater share of the global supply chain shift away from China.
India, Vietnam and Bangladesh were considered front-runners for western companies moving away from China but the latest data suggests that Vietnam is the biggest beneficiary of the US-China trade disputes.