This article was first published in The Kathmandu Post, July 19, 2016.
Nepal’s
plan to become a middle-income country by 2030 is a pleasant but improbable
prospect considering the current level of economic activities and inflow of
foreign investment. Without a massive influx of foreign investment and
development of large-scale hydropower and other infrastructure projects,
Nepalis cannot hope to be on a par with consumers from other middle-income
countries. Inviting private investment from China and India is a daunting task
as they see Nepal as a market with less profit with high risks. The immediate
task for the government is to help investors mitigate risks resulting from
ultra-nationalistic groups and political instability. Nepal should also form an
economic and strategic dialogue committee with representatives from all three
countries with the special purpose of assisting investors.
China’s
One Belt, One Road (OBOR) project to connect the Eurasian region by land and
sea is a chance to enlarge the size of Asia’s contribution to the world
economy. The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), a China-led
multilateral bank, is dedicated to complementing the projects surrounding the
OBOR initiative. Nepal is a founding member of the bank, but it will have to
work to find ways to make optimal utilisation of this initiative. Nepal has
submitted proposals for five infrastructure projects to the AIIB for possible
financing. Moreover, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the World Bank have
approved $1 billion to develop the hydropower sector.
Elephant and the dragon
Against
this backdrop, Nepal-China relations have become even more fragile not because
they have entered into any kind of conflict but because of their proximity.
This closeness has caused paranoia in New Delhi, leading China to be more
cautious about moving at a fast pace. Nepal-China ties cannot be built and
strengthened in an absolute vacuum given that Nepal has always been submissive
to India culturally, socially and politically. This submission is a result of
its complete economic dependence on the southern neighbour. In order to
untangle such a complicated relationship, Nepal should work on the economic
front to make Nepal-India relations economically interdependent. Chinese
investment can be a complementary force to make this happen in the next
one or two decades. This is where Nepal should draw lessons from China. Deng
Xiaoping used to frequently cite an admonition from the Warring States period,
“Hide your ambitions and build your capability.”
Having
said that, India is a democratic country and it has a strong civil society and
an opposition, which was vocal during the four-month-long economic blockade of
Nepal. However, India’s official ‘Nepal policy’ may not change dramatically. We
have seen the attitude of the Indian establishment of maintaining controlled
anarchy in Nepal using various means and forces and sometimes even sympathetic
investment in radical groups. Conspiracy theorists go even further and argue
that the not-so-genuine groups making unrealistic demands get support from
various Indian sources. Whatever that might be, the leadership should focus on
managing genuine Indian security interests and feeding its regional hegemonic
‘ego’ until Nepal becomes economically sophisticated enough to host Indian
migrant workers in the Tarai.
India’s
relationship with China is driven mostly by paranoid security hawks’ thinking
from New Delhi rather than from the perspective of trade, investment and
cooperation. But China does not consider India a competitor in terms of
economic and military power anymore. The only fear for China from India is the
latter’s ideological proximity with the West and its soft power such as the
media and civil society. Which is why there is no strong foundation for
China-India cooperation in many areas. In this context, Nepal should be able to
bring the southern and northern neighbours together in a common dialogue forum.
“Nepal can’t be prosperous only by being close to India, it has to please India
to prosper. Nepal has to win India’s heart; but do establish strong trade and
investment ties with China.” This is what I hear from people who have been
managing India-Nepal relations. Meanwhile, what China and India have in common
in their dealings with Nepal is that both test the waters and work to get their
interests served.
Striking a balance
Nepal
has failed to work diplomatically with China and India. A very recent example
of this is the Lipu Lake Pass episode. There was a great hue and cry from
Nepal’s civil society and political parties when China and India issued a joint
communiqué during Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to China in 2014,
but the Nepal government failed to hold discussions with China and India
regarding the issue of Lipu Lake and explain clearly to the Nepali people what
exactly is the case. The public outrage was used for political manoeuvring by
some so-called nationalist political forces, but they didn’t take any official
initiatives to resolve the issue. This shows the level of diplomatic efficiency
of Nepal and the political maturity of the Nepali leadership beyond
nationalistic rhetoric for public consumption.
There
are numerous issues to be resolved trilaterally, so it will be wise to form a
dialogue forum with representatives from China, India and Nepal. There is
already an Eminent Persons Group (EPG) from Nepal and India, and it should work
to include China too. If the EPG feels nervous about having China on board, the
government should get people with an open mind and who are driven by
constructive idealism to take it forward.
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