India and South Korea Reset Ties Amid Global Shifts: A New Era of Tech Cooperation

India and South Korea have reset their bilateral ties during South Korean President Lee Jae Myung's long-overdue visit to India. The new focus moves beyond traditional sectors like automobiles and steel to emphasize semiconductors, artificial intelligence, digital infrastructure, and advanced manufacturing. This pragmatic cooperation model combines India's market scale and digital public infrastructure with South Korea's manufacturing discipline and high-tech expertise. The partnership aims to reduce dependence on narrow supplier sets while strengthening both nations' roles in shaping the Global South.

Key Points: India-South Korea Reset Ties: Tech, Tariffs, and New Global Strategy

  • Long-overdue visit signals reset in India-South Korea ties
  • Focus shifts to semiconductors, AI, and digital infrastructure
  • Cooperation model combines India's market scale with South Korea's industrial depth
  • Bilateral ties aim to reduce supply chain dependence and strengthen Global South role
3 min read

India and South Korea reset ties amid changing global dynamics

India and South Korea reset ties with a focus on semiconductors, AI, and digital infrastructure. A pragmatic model of cooperation emerges amid global shifts.

"If India and South Korea follow through, this visit may be remembered not as a diplomatic courtesy but as the moment two major Asian democracies decided to stop underperforming. - One World Outlook report"

Seoul, April 25

The long overdue visit of the South Korean President Lee Jae Myung to India earlier this week signalled a reset in ties, with both nations acknowledging that their earlier engagement was too limited for a world shaped by tariffs, chips, supply-chain shocks and great-power pressure.

According to a report in 'One World Outlook', India and South Korea offer a pragmatic model of cooperation, bringing together a large emerging democracy and an advanced industrial democracy that drives technology, capacity and jobs beyond mere rhetoric.

"The long delay was not an accident. It reflected habit, not hostility. India was busy building ties with the US, managing China, consolidating its Gulf relationships and asserting itself across the Global South. South Korea, meanwhile, spent years focused on North Korea, its security dependence on the United States and the awkward reality of doing business with China while worrying about China. In that crowded diplomatic calendar, India-Korea ties were important but never urgent enough to force a summit breakthrough," the report detailed.

The report in 'One World Outlook' stressed that the real opportunity lies in technology, with India and South Korea moving beyond automobiles and steel to focus on semiconductors, artificial intelligence, digital infrastructure, payments, battery supply chains and advanced manufacturing.

"That shift matters because the next decade will reward countries that can combine market scale with industrial depth. India brings the former; South Korea brings the latter. India has talent, data scale and a booming digital public infrastructure. South Korea has manufacturing discipline, export sophistication and deep experience in high-technology production. Together, they can do more than trade. They can co-build," it mentioned.

"This is also why the 'digital bridge' idea has significance beyond diplomacy-speak. It suggests that the two countries understand the strategic value of shared digital standards, interoperable systems and trusted technology partnerships. In a world where chips, cloud systems and AI models are increasingly tied to national security, a bilateral relationship that moves from software contracts to ecosystem cooperation is something much bigger," it further stated.

The report noted that the bilateral cooperation across diverse sectors offers a way to reduce dependence on a narrow set of suppliers while opening up new industrial corridors.

Highlighting the broader significance of the bilateral cooperation, the report said, "Now the language is clearer: technology, industrial capacity, defence production, maritime resilience and a more serious role in shaping the Global South. If India and South Korea follow through, this visit may be remembered not as a diplomatic courtesy but as the moment two major Asian democracies decided to stop underperforming and start building something that matches the world around them."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sneha F
It's great to see this reset, but I hope it translates into real jobs on ground rather than just another MoU signing ceremony. India has been talking about chip manufacturing with many countries; execution is key. 🤔
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Rajan T
Good analysis. The 'digital bridge' concept is especially promising. With UPI and Korea's digital infrastructure, we could truly build interoperable systems for the Global South. This is where India should lead.
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Lisa P
As someone who follows Indo-Pacific dynamics, this is a smart move. Both countries were too distracted with other priorities. Now with supply chain diversification and tech competition from China, this partnership has real strategic weight.
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Arjun K
I appreciate the caution in the report—it's good to be ambitious but not overly optimistic. Korea's domestic politics and India's bureaucracy could still slow things down. Let's hope the 'reset' is more than just a diplomatic exercise. 🙏
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Nikhil C
This is what real multi-alignment looks like. India isn't choosing sides—it's building tech partnerships with both the US and South Korea while balancing China. The semiconductor angle is crucial for Atmanirbhar Bharat.

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