What falling out with the US means for India - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
美印关系

What falling out with the US means for India

Trump’s move threatens the country’s economy and Modi’s dominance of domestic politics — and could lead to realignment
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":7.34,"text":"The writer is a lecturer in south Asian studies at Yale University."}],[{"start":12.59,"text":"In February, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi stood beside US President Donald Trump at the White House, projecting optimism as they pledged to lift bilateral trade to $500bn by 2030 and hinted at a new comprehensive trade agreement. In a display of bonhomie emblematic of deepening strategic co-operation, Modi invited the US president to India for the planned Quad leaders’ summit later this year. Echoing Trump’s “Make America Great Again” slogan, Modi declared he was working to “Make India Great Again”, adding that “Maga plus Miga becomes a mega partnership for prosperity.”"}],[{"start":54.39,"text":"Within just a few months, this mega-partnership has given way to mutual recriminations and punitive action. Trump announced tariffs of 25 per cent on Indian imports, accusing New Delhi of erecting “strenuous and obnoxious” trade barriers, then promptly doubled them to a draconian 50 per cent with threats of further increases. The reason: India’s continued purchases of Russian oil, which Washington contends are undermining its sanctions regime on Moscow. Trump has ruled out further negotiations until these disputes are resolved."}],[{"start":94.53999999999999,"text":"Efforts to finalise an interim trade deal fell apart abruptly after five rounds of talks, despite India’s willingness to increase US energy and defence imports and to lower tariffs on American industrial goods. The collapse, due to political miscalculations and hardened positions on agricultural norms and quotas, has left $190bn of annual trade in limbo and a $46bn deficit unaddressed."}],[{"start":127.82,"text":"Trump’s actions have triggered a wide-ranging fallout. The decision to subject India to the highest tariff rates of any Asian partner sharply undermines New Delhi’s ambitions in the Indo-Pacific. Although the foreign ministers of Australia, Japan, US and India recently met in Washington, the much anticipated Quad leaders’ summit now seems unlikely this year. Instead, by coercively leveraging its economic might, the US risks driving India closer to Russia, and potentially even to China, which Modi is planning to visit later this month."}],[{"start":166.72,"text":"Rather than buttressing India as a counterweight to Chinese assertiveness — the premise that had tied India and the US for the past 25 years — Trump seems to be abandoning New Delhi. Meanwhile, he has courted Pakistan with preferable tariff rates and an oil exploration pact just months after India and Pakistan teetered on the edge of war, spotlighting Kashmir and treating the two nations as equals — moves that India abhors. The sense of grievance was aggravated when Trump hosted Pakistan’s army chief for lunch at the White House in June."}],[{"start":208.36,"text":"If Trump follows through, the economic impact on India will be severe. The doubling of tariffs threatens India’s $87bn export engine to the US — 18 per cent of its total exports and more than 2 per cent of GDP. Industry experts warn of a 40-50 per cent reduction in shipments, especially for labour-intensive sectors such as textiles, jewellery and automobiles. Small and medium-sized industries face a crisis in competitiveness, while GDP growth forecasts have been revised down by as much as 1 per cent. The immediate market impact is acute: a weaker rupee, risk of imported inflation, an exodus of foreign portfolio investors, and rising borrowing costs for foreign currency debtors."}],[{"start":259.95000000000005,"text":"These developments also risk upending India’s domestic politics. Modi, whose exaggerated claims of foreign policy achievements and strongman image — anchored in his supposed personal rapport with leaders like Trump — have been integral to his political standing among India’s middle-class, now faces withering domestic criticism. The opposition Indian National Congress party labelled him “Narendra Surrender” for yielding to pressure from Trump. US-backed Hindu nationalist groups, politically vital for Modi, feel jettisoned by Trump’s attacks on India."}],[{"start":299.84000000000003,"text":"Modi’s Bharatiya Janata party lost its parliamentary majority in the last election, and the current spat reopens questions about his economic stewardship and diplomatic choices. His weakness in tackling China, accentuated as he is spurned by Trump, could become another domestic vulnerability. It is Modi’s lowest American moment since he was denied a visa in 2005 due to his role as Gujurat’s chief minister during a wave of anti-Muslim violence in 2002."}],[{"start":334.19000000000005,"text":"At risk is three decades of India’s economic ascent and its careful positioning as an emerging power, shaped in the shadow of US strategic backing. Trump has shredded India’s road map; it could be replaced by strategic drift, realignment or eventual rapprochement."}],[{"start":354.1700000000001,"text":"In 2020, Modi hosted Trump at a rally of 100,000 people in Ahmedabad. As they shook hands a final time, the Rolling Stones song filled the stadium: “You can’t always get what you want”. It turns out that, with Trump, Modi can’t get what he wants — or what India needs."}],[{"start":383.9800000000001,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftmailbox.cn/album/a_1755070219_7763.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

外国投资者重返中国股市

深度求索在AI领域的突破,引发四年来最大规模的海外资金流入。

俄气推进拖延已久的对华管道项目

俄罗斯能源巨头着手开展研究,显示其认为项目已重回正轨。

瑞士化学物质集团科莱恩警告:更多生产或将撤离欧洲

首席执行官在扩大其在中国的产能之际指出,欧洲大陆的能源和劳动力成本更高。

民主头顶盘旋着一个新幽灵:预测市场

它们提供了一个令人担忧的机会,可以操纵公众对政治事件结果的认知。

北极地区领导人警告:远北混合战争风险日益上升

偏远的法罗群岛正商谈铺设一条额外的海底互联网电缆,以防通信遭到破坏。

Z世代和千禧一代正在拯救邮轮业

得益于年轻乘客的预订,运营商在低迷的旅游业中逆势走强。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×