By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
Will India Surpass China To Become The
Next Superpower?
When India overtook
China in April to become the world’s most populous
nation, observers wondered:
Will New Delhi surpass Beijing to become the next global superpower? India’s
birth rate is almost twice that of China. And India has outpaced China in
economic growth for the past two years—its GDP grew 6.1 percent last quarter,
compared with China’s 4.5 percent. At first glance, the statistics seem
promising.
This question has
only become more relevant as Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi meets with
U.S. President Joe Biden in Washington this week. From a U.S. perspective, if
India—the world’s largest democracy—really could trump China, that would be
something to shout about. India is China’s natural adversary; the two countries
share more than 2,000 miles of disputed, undemarcated
border, where conflict sporadically. The bigger and stronger China’s
competitors in Asia, the greater the prospects for a balance of power favorable
to the United States.
Yet before inhaling
the narrative of a rapidly rising India too deeply, we should pause to reflect
on four inconvenient truths.
First, analysts have
been wrong about India’s rise in the past. In the 1990s, analysts trumpeted a
growing, youthful Indian population that would drive economic liberalization to
create an “economic miracle.” One of the United States’ most thoughtful India
analysts, journalist Fareed Zakaria, noted in a recent column in the Washington Post that he
found himself caught up in the second wave of this euphoria in 2006 when the
World Economic Forum in Davos heralded India as the “world’s fastest-growing
free market democracy” and the then-Indian trade minister said that India’s
economy would shortly surpass China’s. Although India’s economy did grow,
Zakaria points out that these predictions didn’t come true.
Second, despite
India’s extraordinary growth over the past two years—when India joined the club
of the world’s five largest economies—India’s economy has remained much smaller
than China’s. In the early 2000s, China’s manufacturing, exports, and GDP were about two to three times larger than India’s.
China’s economy is about five times larger, with a GDP of $17.7 trillion,
versus India’s GDP of $3.2 trillion.
Third, India must
catch up in the race to develop science and technology to power economic
growth. China graduates nearly twice as many
STEM students as
India. China spends 2 percent of its GDP on research and
development, while India spends 0.7 percent. Four of the world’s 20 most
prominent tech companies by revenue are Chinese; none are based in India.
China produces over
half of the world’s
5G infrastructure, India just 1 percent. TikTok and similar apps created in
China are now global leaders, but India has yet to make a tech product that has
gone global.
Regarding producing
artificial intelligence (AI), China is the only global rival to the United
States. China’s SenseTime AI model recently beat OpenAI’s GPT-4 on key technical performance
measures; India has no entry in this race. China holds 65 percent of the
world’s AI patents, compared with India’s 3 percent. China’s AI firms have
received $95 billion in
private investment from
2013 through 2022 versus India’s $7 billion. And top-tier AI researchers hail
primarily from China, the United States, and Europe, while India lags.
Fourth, when
assessing a nation’s power, the quality of its workforce matters more than the
number of its citizens. China’s workforce is more productive than India’s. The
international community has rightly celebrated China’s “anti-poverty
miracle” that has
essentially eliminated abject poverty. In contrast, India continues to have
high levels of poverty and malnutrition. In 1980, 90 percent of China’s 1 billion citizens had incomes below
the World Bank’s threshold for abject poverty. Today, that number is
approximately zero. Yet more than 10 percent of India’s population of 1.4 billion continue to
live below the World Bank extreme poverty line of $2.15 per day. Meanwhile,
16.3 percent of India’s population was undernourished in 2019-21, compared with
less than 2.5 percent of China’s population, according to the most recent
United Nations State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World report. India also has one of the worst child malnutrition
rates in the world.
Fortunately, the future
sometimes resembles the past. But as a sign in the Pentagon warns: Hope is not
a plan. While doing whatever it can to help Modi’s India realize a better
future, Washington should also reflect on the assessment of Asia’s most
insightful strategist. The founding father and long-time leader of Singapore,
Lee Kuan Yew, had great respect for Indians. Lee worked with successive Indian
prime ministers, including Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi, hoping to help
them make India strong enough to be a serious check on China (and thus provide
the space required for his small city-state to survive and thrive).
But as Lee explained in
a series of interviews published in 2014, the year before his death, he
reluctantly concluded that this was not likely to happen. In his analysis, the
combination of India’s deep-rooted caste system that was an enemy of a
meritocracy, its massive bureaucracy, and its elites’ unwillingness to address
the competing claims of its multiple ethnic and religious groups led him to
conclude that it would never be more than “the county of the future”—with that
future never arriving. Thus, when I asked him a decade ago whether India could
become the next China, he answered directly: “Do not talk about India and China
in the same breath.”
Since Lee offered
this judgment, India has embarked on an ambitious infrastructure and
development agenda under a new leader and demonstrated that it could achieve
considerable economic growth. Yet while we can remain hopeful that this time
could be different, I suspect Lee wouldn’t bet on it.
For updates click hompage here