India Can Shape Global Geoeconomics as a Pivotal Actor: Report

India has the potential to influence global geoeconomics as a pivotal actor, according to a report by former foreign secretary Nirupama Rao. The report emphasizes that geopolitics has entered economics, with trade, technology, and finance becoming instruments of strategic competition. It calls for India to approach this era not defensively but as an active shaper of the emerging global order. India's distinctive position as a major emerging economy with global aspirations and strategic autonomy presents both an opportunity and a responsibility.

Key Points: India as Pivotal Actor in Global Geoeconomics: Report

  • India can shape global geoeconomics as a pivotal actor
  • Geopolitics has entered economics, trade is strategic leverage
  • Multilateralism must be reformed, not abandoned
  • India occupies distinctive position with global aspirations and strategic autonomy
3 min read

India has potential to influence global geoeconomics as pivotal actor: Report

Report says India has potential to influence global geoeconomics as a pivotal actor, shaping multilateralism and globalisation beyond defensive approaches.

"We have the capacity - economically, diplomatically, and intellectually - to influence that outcome - Nirupama Rao"

New Delhi, May 7

The future of globalisation, multilateralism, and geoeconomics will be shaped by policy choices, institutional choices and leadership choices, and India must not approach this era defensively, according to a new report.

Nirupama Rao, former Indian Foreign Secretary and distinguished Indian Foreign Service officer, writes in India Narrative that "we have the capacity - economically, diplomatically, and intellectually - to influence that outcome".

"Not alone, of course, but as a pivotal actor," she says.

According to her, conversations like the Asia Economic Dialogue matter precisely because the "assumptions that underpinned global politics and economics for three decades after the end of the Cold War are shifting beneath our feet".

While geopolitics has entered the bloodstream of economics, trade has become a strategic leverage, technology has become sovereign territory, finance has become an instrument of coercion, and supply chains have become battlefields.

"This is why the theme before us, Geoeconomics Beyond Globalisation, is not rhetorical. It is diagnostic," Rao notes.

She touches upon three broad themes: why global politics and economics appear so turbulent; whether multilateralism and globalisation are truly in retreat or simply evolving; and what this moment means for India - "not as a passive observer, which we can never be, but as an active shaper of the emerging global order".

The report stresses that the United States remains the preeminent military and financial power.

China has emerged as a comprehensive economic and manufacturing powerhouse, increasingly assertive and capable of projecting power and demonstrating resilience.

"Russia is militarily disruptive, middle powers are much more ambitious, and the Global South is more vocal. This transition is inherently unstable," the author emphasises.

According to her, economic policy is increasingly intertwined with strategic competition.

"Trade restrictions, technology export controls, investment screening, sanctions - all these tools, once considered primarily economic, are now instruments of geopolitical statecraft," she mentions.

Major powers are not merely competing for markets; they are competing for technological primacy, supply chain control and normative influence, she adds.

"India has historically valued multilateralism not as an abstract ideal but as a practical necessity. Rules-based cooperation gives developing countries voice and leverage. Reform, not abandonment, should therefore be our guiding principle," the report notes.

India today occupies a distinctive position. It is a major emerging economy with global aspirations; it retains credibility among developing countries.

"It participates in Western-led initiatives while maintaining strategic autonomy. It has demographic vitality, technological talent, and a growing diplomatic influence. But India cannot control global turbulence, although it can shape its trajectory. I call it more than a middle power; I call it a pivotal state. This situation, therefore, presents an opportunity but also responsibility," Rao highlights.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
Interesting perspective from an American viewpoint. I see India's challenge as balancing its ties with the US and West while maintaining that strategic autonomy with Russia and others. It's a delicate dance, but if anyone can pull it off, it's a country with India's diplomatic history. The supply chain shift away from China is a huge opportunity.
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Priya S
I appreciate the optimism but we need to be realistic. India's manufacturing base still lags behind China's, our R&D spending is low, and we have massive infrastructure gaps. Being a 'pivotal actor' requires more than just rhetoric—it means actually building world-class institutions and reducing corruption. The potential is there, but the execution has to improve drastically.
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Rohit P
The point about multilateralism evolving is spot on! India has always punched above its weight in forums like the UN and WTO. But we need to push for real reforms in these institutions, not just play the game. The Global South looks to us for leadership—we must use that trust to build a fairer world order. 🌍
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Arjun K
Being a 'pivotal state' comes with huge responsibilities. We can't afford to be fence-sitters anymore. Whether it's climate change, AI governance, or maritime security in the Indo-Pacific, India must take clear positions and invest in capabilities. Also, our neighbourhood policy needs to be more proactive—Pakistan and China won't wait for us.
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Kavya N
Nirupama Rao is absolutely right that 'trade has become strategic leverage'. Look at what's happening with semiconductors and rare earths. India needs

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