Is India prepared for the end of globalisation?
UPSC Study Note: Is India Prepared for the End of Globalisation?
1. At a Glance
- Deglobalisation refers to the unwinding of the post-1990s liberal international economic order — characterised by free trade, multilateral institutions, and integrated supply chains — and its replacement by mercantilism, protectionism, and transactional bilateralism. [S1]
- India, as the world's fifth-largest economy and a major trading nation, faces acute exposure: its export competitiveness, FDI inflows, diaspora remittances, and technology access are all embedded in the globalised order now fracturing. [S2]
- UPSC relevance is high and cross-cutting: GS-II (international relations), GS-III (Indian economy, trade, infrastructure), and Essay paper (civilisational themes, India's global role).
- The central question — whether India has the state capacity, institutional depth, and social contract to navigate a world of managed trade blocs — is a live policy debate as of 2026. [S1]
2. Why in the News
- January 2026: U.S. President Donald Trump publicly claimed India had reduced Russian oil imports to "make him happy" and threatened additional tariffs if India "displeases" him — framing bilateral trade as personal leverage rather than rules-based engagement. [S1]
- The remarks encapsulate the broader shift: the WTO dispute-settlement system is functionally paralysed (Appellate Body non-functional since 2019), and the U.S. has pivoted to unilateral tariff tools. [S3]
- WTO Global Trade Outlook (March 2026) flagged that FDI in tariff-exposed and global value chain-intensive sectors (textiles, electronics, machinery) is projected to fall by 25% — sectors central to India's Make in India and PLI ambitions. [S3]
- The January 30, 2026 Hindu BusinessLine commentary by Suvojit Chattopadhyay framed India's preparedness deficit across three axes: state capability, social cohesion, and equitable growth distribution. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
| Period | Development |
|---|---|
| 1648–1945 | Westphalian state system; trade driven by colonialism and mercantilism; wealth accumulated through extraction. [S1] |
| 1944 | Bretton Woods system established IMF + World Bank; U.S. dollar as reserve currency underpins liberal order. |
| 1947 | GATT signed — first multilateral trade framework; India a founding signatory. |
| 1991 | India's balance-of-payments crisis → LPG reforms (Liberalisation, Privatisation, Globalisation); tariff reduction, FDI opening, rupee devaluation. |
| 1995 | India joins WTO on 1 January 1995; binds itself to MFN and national treatment obligations. [S2] |
| 2001 | China's WTO accession reshapes global supply chains; India faces competition in manufacturing. |
| 2008 | Global Financial Crisis — first fissure in neoliberal consensus. |
| 2016–20 | Brexit, Trump 1.0 tariffs, COVID-19 supply-chain disruptions accelerate friend-shoring and near-shoring trends. |
| 2022–26 | Russia-Ukraine war → energy market fragmentation; U.S.-China tech decoupling; Trump 2.0 tariff escalation (2025–26) signals end of rules-based multilateral trade order. [S1][S3] |
- Predecessor concept: Washington Consensus (1989) — IMF/World Bank prescription of fiscal discipline, privatisation, trade liberalisation — was the policy backbone of the globalisation era.
4. Core Static Facts
Definitional clarifications: - Globalisation (fuller definition): Not merely free trade in goods/services, but a political system governing how states run markets, engage with each other, and operate through networked multilateral institutions — associated with liberalism, democracy, and cooperative norms. [S1] - Mercantilism: Trade as an instrument of state power; surpluses = strength; deficits = weakness. The framework now re-emerging under Trump-era U.S. policy. [S1] - Friend-shoring: Restructuring supply chains to favour geopolitically aligned partners (U.S. policy term post-2022). - PLI (Production Linked Incentive): India's domestic manufacturing-push scheme across 14 sectors — designed to reduce import dependence and build export capacity.
Key institutions and India's membership:
| Body | India Status | Key Fact |
|---|---|---|
| WTO | Member since 1 Jan 1995 [S2] | Founding member of GATT (1947) |
| IMF | Founding member (1944) | Quota share ~2.75% |
| World Bank | Founding member | IBRD + IDA borrower |
| G20 | Presidency held 2023 | "One Earth One Family One Future" theme |
| RCEP | Not a signatory (withdrew 2019) | Concerns over China import surge |
| QUAD | Member | Tech/supply chain cooperation |
Trade exposure (WTO data): - India's Most Favoured Nation (MFN) applied tariff is among the highest of major economies — average ~15% on non-agricultural goods — making it vulnerable to reciprocal tariff escalation. [S2] - FDI in GVC-intensive sectors projected to fall 25% globally in 2025 per WTO Global Trade Outlook March 2026. [S3] - India's goods exports ~$440 bn (FY 2023-24); services exports ~$340 bn — both embedded in liberal-order infrastructure (SWIFT, dollar settlement, open logistics).
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- India's export basket (petroleum products, gems & jewellery, pharma, textiles, IT services) is deeply globalisation-dependent; a fragmented world creates market access uncertainty. [S1]
- The dollar dominance of trade finance means INR internationalisation efforts (RBI's rupee trade settlement framework, 2022) remain embryonic — India cannot easily route around dollar-centric systems.
- GVC participation is shallow: India captures labour-intensive segments, not high-value design/IP nodes; deglobalisation could strand this limited integration without offering domestic alternatives.
- A 25% projected decline in FDI in tariff-exposed GVC sectors [S3] directly threatens PLI scheme targets and the "China+1" opportunity India was banking on.
Geopolitical / Strategic
- Trump's framing of India-Russia oil trade as a bilateral favour signals India's strategic autonomy is increasingly costly — large powers now demand alignment, not just non-alignment. [S1]
- India's Act East Policy and membership of Quad, I2U2 (India-Israel-UAE-U.S.), and IPEF (Indo-Pacific Economic Framework) position it across competing blocs without deep institutionalisation in any.
- Return to mercantilism favours large continental economies (U.S., China, EU) that can sustain autarky; India's market size (~1.4 bn) is an asset but institutional capacity to leverage it is untested at scale. [S1]
- India's withdrawal from RCEP (2019) shielded domestic industry short-term but foreclosed deep Asia-Pacific supply-chain integration — a strategic cost now becoming visible.
Administrative / State Capacity
- The article explicitly identifies weak state capability as India's core vulnerability: without it, neither export-push nor import-substitution can be executed effectively. [S1]
- India's logistics performance (LPI World Bank rank: 38/139 in 2023) and ease of doing business gaps mean cost competitiveness erodes even when tariff opportunities arise.
- Centre-State coordination deficits in land acquisition, labour law harmonisation, and industrial infrastructure undermine manufacturing scale-up needed for a deglobalised world.
Social
- Globalisation's gains in India have been unequally distributed: urban IT/services workers benefited disproportionately; agricultural and informal-sector workers remain outside the dividend. [S1]
- The article warns that without a social contract committed to sharing growth more evenly, India risks political instability that undermines the long-term state-building required. [S1]
- Jobless growth — high GDP growth with inadequate formal employment generation — means India cannot absorb its demographic dividend without the labour-intensive manufacturing that GVC integration was meant to catalyse.
Historical
- Early globalisation was built on force and extraction — the industrialised north accumulated wealth through domestic exploitation and overseas resource extraction; trade was lopsided, not free. [S1]
- India was itself a victim of colonial mercantilism (deindustrialisation of textiles, drain of wealth) — making the current return to mercantilist norms geopolitically ironic and historically resonant.
- Post-1991 India internalised the Washington Consensus without fully building the developmental state institutions (Korea, Japan, China model) that make countries resilient when the consensus collapses.
Ethical / Governance
- Aspiring to be Vishwaguru ("World Teacher") without institutional foundations and economic means to deliver it is identified as a governance credibility risk. [S1]
- Crony capitalism and weak regulatory independence mean that protectionism in a deglobalised world could entrench rent-seeking rather than building genuine industrial capability.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- January 2026: Trump claims India reduced Russian oil imports as a "favour" to him; threatens further tariffs — signals bilateral transactionalism replacing rules-based trade. [S1]
- March 2026: WTO Global Trade Outlook flags 25% projected decline in FDI for GVC-intensive/tariff-exposed sectors; global trade growth revised downward. [S3]
- 2025: U.S. imposes broad tariff packages under Section 232/301 authorities; India faces potential exposure on pharma, gems, IT hardware exports.
- 2025: India-UK Free Trade Agreement negotiations advance (as of mid-2025) — bilateral FTA strategy as hedge against multilateral collapse.
- 2024–25: India's PLI scheme disbursal picks up in electronics, mobile phones (Apple supply-chain shift to India); but scale remains limited vs. China.
- 2025: RBI's rupee trade settlement framework expands to 22 countries — early-stage attempt at reducing dollar dependence. [S4]
- 2024: India's goods trade deficit widens; China remains top import source (~$100 bn+) — structural vulnerability in a decoupling world.
7. Prelims Hooks
- India became a WTO member on 1 January 1995 — also the year WTO replaced GATT. [S2]
- India was a founding signatory of GATT in 1947 — predates WTO by 48 years.
- India withdrew from RCEP negotiations in November 2019 — the only ASEAN+ partner to do so.
- GATT (General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade) was established in 1947; replaced by WTO in 1995.
- WTO's Appellate Body has been non-functional since December 2019 due to U.S. blocking of new appointments — key paralysis in multilateral trade dispute resolution.
- FDI in GVC-intensive sectors is projected to decline by 25% globally in 2025, per WTO Global Trade Outlook March 2026. [S3]
- Mercantilism views trade surpluses as national strength and deficits as weakness — the framework now associated with Trump-era U.S. trade policy. [S1]
- India's PLI scheme covers 14 sectors — launched from 2020 onwards under Ministry of Commerce & Industry / respective sectoral ministries.
- The Washington Consensus (1989) — coined by economist John Williamson — prescribed fiscal discipline, privatisation, and trade liberalisation as development policy.
- I2U2 grouping (India, Israel, UAE, U.S.) was launched in July 2022 — focuses on investment in food, energy, health, space, transport, water.
- India's MFN applied tariff on non-agricultural goods averages ~15% — among the highest of major economies, per WTO Tariff Profiles 2025. [S2]
- Bretton Woods institutions (IMF + World Bank) were established in 1944 at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, USA.
- Friend-shoring is a U.S. policy concept (articulated by Treasury Secretary Yellen, 2022) of reshoring supply chains to geopolitical allies.
- India's Act East Policy replaced the Look East Policy in November 2014 at the ASEAN-India Summit in Myanmar.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers: - GS-II: International relations — India's foreign policy in a multipolar/post-globalisation world; bilateral vs. multilateral frameworks; WTO and India. - GS-III: Indian economy — trade policy, export competitiveness, PLI, FDI, supply-chain integration; impact of global economic shifts on India. - Essay Paper: "India at the crossroads of globalisation and nationalism"; "Vishwaguru aspirations vs. institutional realities."
Syllabus headings: - GS-II: Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests; Important international institutions, agencies and fora. - GS-III: Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment; Effects of liberalisation on the economy.
Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "Globalisation is a political system, not merely an economic arrangement. In light of its apparent unravelling, critically assess India's preparedness to navigate a mercantilist world order." (GS-III / Essay) 2. "India's withdrawal from RCEP was strategically prudent in 2019 but has left it exposed as global supply chains fragment. Evaluate." (GS-II / GS-III) 3. "Without robust state capacity, social cohesion, and equitable growth, India's ambition to be Vishwaguru in a post-globalisation world remains aspirational. Discuss." (GS-II / Essay)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| WTO and India | Multilateral trade architecture whose collapse drives this issue; Appellate Body crisis, dispute cases. |
| Make in India & PLI Scheme | India's domestic industrial-policy response to supply-chain fragmentation. |
| India-U.S. Relations (Trump 2.0) | Immediate trigger; tariff threats, H-1B dynamics, defence procurement linkages. |
| India's FTA Strategy | India-UK, India-GCC, India-EU FTAs — bilateral hedges against multilateral breakdown. |
| Washington Consensus & Post-Washington Consensus | Intellectual backdrop of globalisation era and its critique. |
| India's Trade Deficit with China | Structural vulnerability in a decoupling world; electronics, APIs, capital goods dependence. |
| Bretton Woods System & IMF Quota Reform | Institutional architecture of liberal order; India's push for greater voting share. |
| Developmental State Theory (East Asian Model) | Contrast with India's post-1991 path; why state capacity matters for industrial policy. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
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Confusing GATT with WTO: GATT (1947) was a treaty, not an organisation; the WTO (1995) is the organisation with legal personality. India was a GATT contracting party, not a GATT "member."
-
Assuming India's LPG reforms = full globalisation buy-in: India liberalised selectively — it retained high tariff walls, resisted RCEP, and never opened agriculture fully to WTO disciplines. India was always a partial globaliser.
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Conflating deglobalisation with autarky: Deglobalisation does not mean zero trade; it means the shift from rules-based multilateralism to managed/bilateral/bloc-based trade. India must navigate managed trade, not self-sufficiency.
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Misattributing "Washington Consensus": Coined by economist John Williamson in 1989 — NOT a U.S. government policy document. Do not call it a "treaty" or "agreement."
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Overstating PLI as a complete answer: PLI is an incentive scheme, not a structural industrial policy. It addresses investment attraction but not logistics gaps, skills deficits, or regulatory bottlenecks — the deeper state-capacity issues the article flags. [S1]
11. Sources
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[S1] Suvojit Chattopadhyay, "Is India prepared for the end of globalisation?" — The Hindu BusinessLine, 30 January 2026, Page 8 International Print Edition — (Tier 4; article excerpt as primary source)
https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-01-30/th_international/articleG4FFGP7S3-13290593.ece -
[S2] WTO | India — Member Information & Tariff Profiles 2025 — (Tier 2)
https://www.wto.org/english/thewto_e/countries_e/india_e.htmhttps://www.wto.org/english/res_e/publications_e/world_tariff_profiles25_e.htm -
[S3] WTO Global Trade Outlook and Statistics — March 2026 — (Tier 2)
https://www.wto.org/english/res_e/booksp_e/gtos0326_e.pdf -
[S4] RBI Rupee Trade Settlement — referenced via general knowledge corroborated by RBI policy communications — (Tier 1 background)
https://rbi.org.in