Is India prepared for the end of globalisation?


UPSC Study Note: Is India Prepared for the End of Globalisation?


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


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]

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

Geopolitical / Strategic

Administrative / State Capacity

Social

Historical

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India became a WTO member on 1 January 1995 — also the year WTO replaced GATT. [S2]
  2. India was a founding signatory of GATT in 1947 — predates WTO by 48 years.
  3. India withdrew from RCEP negotiations in November 2019 — the only ASEAN+ partner to do so.
  4. GATT (General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade) was established in 1947; replaced by WTO in 1995.
  5. 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.
  6. FDI in GVC-intensive sectors is projected to decline by 25% globally in 2025, per WTO Global Trade Outlook March 2026. [S3]
  7. Mercantilism views trade surpluses as national strength and deficits as weakness — the framework now associated with Trump-era U.S. trade policy. [S1]
  8. India's PLI scheme covers 14 sectors — launched from 2020 onwards under Ministry of Commerce & Industry / respective sectoral ministries.
  9. The Washington Consensus (1989) — coined by economist John Williamson — prescribed fiscal discipline, privatisation, and trade liberalisation as development policy.
  10. I2U2 grouping (India, Israel, UAE, U.S.) was launched in July 2022 — focuses on investment in food, energy, health, space, transport, water.
  11. India's MFN applied tariff on non-agricultural goods averages ~15% — among the highest of major economies, per WTO Tariff Profiles 2025. [S2]
  12. Bretton Woods institutions (IMF + World Bank) were established in 1944 at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, USA.
  13. Friend-shoring is a U.S. policy concept (articulated by Treasury Secretary Yellen, 2022) of reshoring supply chains to geopolitical allies.
  14. 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

  1. 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."

  2. 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.

  3. 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.

  4. 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."

  5. 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