China’s role in the international order

Now I have sufficient facts from Tier 2 (un.org) and the article (Tier 4). Composing the study note.


China's Role in the International Order

UPSC Study Note | GS-II (International Relations) | June 2026


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Period Milestone
1945 China becomes a founding member of the UN and one of five permanent UNSC members (initially represented by ROC/Taiwan)
1971 UN General Assembly Resolution 2758 seats the People's Republic of China (PRC) in place of the Republic of China (Taiwan)
1978 Deng Xiaoping's Reform and Opening-Up policy — China integrates with the global economic order
2001 China joins the World Trade Organization (WTO) — transforms global supply chains
2013 Launch of Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) — China's flagship connectivity/infrastructure strategy spanning 140+ countries
2015 China joins the Paris Agreement on climate; co-founds Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB)
2016 RMB (Renminbi/Yuan) included in IMF's Special Drawing Rights (SDR) basket
2021–25 14th Five-Year Plan; COVID-19 geopolitics strain multilateral trust; US-China tech and trade rivalry intensifies
2026 15th Five-Year Plan begins; unprecedented P5 diplomatic convergence on Beijing [S4]

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Historical

Administrative / Governance

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. China has held veto power as a P5 UNSC member since 1971 (when PRC replaced ROC/Taiwan via UNGA Resolution 2758). [S1]
  2. The UNSC has 5 permanent and 10 non-permanent members; non-permanent members serve 2-year terms. [S2]
  3. China's Permanent Representative to the UN in 2026 is Ambassador Fu Cong; China held the UNSC monthly presidency in May 2026. [S3]
  4. All other P5 leaders (France, UK, USA, Russia) visited China between December 2025 and May 2026 — an event described by JNU's Prof. Rajan Kumar as "extremely rare". [S4]
  5. China joined the WTO on 11 December 2001 — marking its full entry into the rules-based global trade order.
  6. The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) was launched in 2013 and spans 140+ countries.
  7. The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) was established in 2016, headquartered in Beijing; China is its largest shareholder.
  8. The Chinese Renminbi (RMB/Yuan) was added to the IMF's Special Drawing Rights (SDR) basket in October 2016.
  9. China's 15th Five-Year Plan covers 2026–2030 — Xi Jinping's third term as President. [S4]
  10. China is the largest contributor to UN peacekeeping troops among the P5 nations.
  11. The article on China's international role was authored by Qin Jie, Consul General of the PRC in Mumbai, published in The Hindu on 10 June 2026. [S4]
  12. Russia's May 2026 delegation to China included 5 deputy prime ministers, 8 federal ministers, and the head of Russia's Central Bank. [S4]

8. Mains Relevance

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "China's emergence as the central hub of global diplomacy, evidenced by the convergence of P5 leaders in Beijing (2025–26), reflects a shift in the international order. Critically examine the implications for India's foreign policy." (GS-II, 15 marks)

  2. "The UNSC's veto mechanism has been both a stabilising and a paralysing feature of the post-1945 international order. Discuss with reference to China's use of veto power and the debate on UN Security Council reform." (GS-II, 15 marks)

  3. "Evaluate China's dual role as a rule-taker within existing multilateral institutions (WTO, UN) and a rule-maker through alternative institutions (BRI, AIIB, NDB). How does this challenge the liberal international order?" (GS-II/Essay, 250 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
UNSC Reform and India's Permanent Membership Bid Direct link — India seeks P5 status; China's opposition and veto dynamics are central
Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) & China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) BRI's strategic implications for India's sovereignty (CPEC through PoK)
India-China Relations (LAC, Galwan, Disengagement) Bilateral security dimension of China's international role
BRICS and New Development Bank (NDB) China's parallel institution-building alongside BRICS partners including India
WTO and Global Trade Governance China's role as largest goods trader and US-China trade disputes reshaping WTO norms
Russia-Ukraine War and Global Order China's neutrality/Russia support and its effect on the UN multilateral system
AIIB and Development Finance China's challenge to World Bank/IMF conditionality frameworks

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing ROC with PRC at the UN: China's UN seat was held by the Republic of China (Taiwan) until 1971 — not the PRC. The switch was via UNGA Resolution 2758, not a UNSC resolution.
  2. Veto power scope: The veto applies only to substantive (not procedural) UNSC resolutions. Procedural matters require only 9 of 15 affirmative votes with no veto. Aspirants often miss this distinction.
  3. AIIB vs NDB: The AIIB (Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank) is China-led and headquartered in Beijing. The NDB (New Development Bank) is the BRICS bank headquartered in Shanghai — India is a co-founder. Do not conflate the two.
  4. 15th Five-Year Plan timeline: The 15th Plan covers 2026–2030. Confusing it with the 14th (2021–2025) is a common error in current-affairs MCQs.
  5. Trump's May 2026 China Visit: This visit occurred despite the US-China trade war context — aspirants may incorrectly assume no high-level US-China diplomacy exists. The visit signals pragmatic engagement over ideological confrontation.

11. Sources