Key Points

External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar has presented a comprehensive strategy to enhance India's economic engagement with Central Asian countries. He emphasized deepening existing cooperation, diversifying trade options, and establishing more predictable long-term economic interactions. The bilateral trade has already grown from $500 million to nearly $2 billion in a decade, signaling significant potential for future collaboration. Jaishankar also highlighted key sectors like digital economy, healthcare, financial services, and cultural exchanges as critical pathways for mutual growth.

Key Points: Jaishankar Reveals 3-Point Plan for India-Central Asia Trade Growth

  • Deepen existing economic cooperation across multiple sectors
  • Diversify trade basket with new opportunities
  • Introduce long-term sustainable economic interactions
  • Explore potential in energy, mining, and pharmaceuticals
3 min read

EAM Jaishankar lays out three objectives to bolster India-Central Asia trade ties

EAM outlines strategic roadmap to boost bilateral economic ties, emphasizing trade diversification and long-term collaborations

"An economy today which is in excess of $4 trillion, which is growing at 6-8 per cent annually, it will create new demands - S. Jaishankar"

New Delhi, June 6

External Affairs Minister (EAM) S. Jaishankar has urged the India-Central Asia Business Council to recommend a roadmap for further deepening of India-Central Asia ties in trade, economic and investment.

Addressing the Business Council meeting in the national capital, EAM Jaishankar highlighted three broad objectives for strengthening the economic partnership -- deepen existing cooperation, diversify the trade basket and introduce sustainability and predictability in economic interactions.

"One, is to deepen the existing cooperation both in terms of volume and in terms of quality. There is already I think a recognition in each others countries and each others economies of the players and of the products. But, we must build further on that foundation and a very good example here is actually the pharmaceutical sector," he told the gathering.

"Two, we need to diversify our trade baskets so that all of us have more options and we have more competition and in a way we are looking for new opportunities. I would like our friends from central Asian economies to appreciate that an economy today which is in excess of $4 trillion, which is growing at 6-8 per cent annually, it will create new demands for products, for services and even I would say in a way new demands out of more prosperous lifestyles," EAM Jaishankar emphasised.

He also stressed on the need to introduce greater sustainability and more predictability in economic interactions.

"That means more long-term contracts and arrangements, cross investments, joint ventures and certainly sectors like energy whether we are talking uranium, whether we are talking crude oil even potentially gas, whether we are looking at mining, If you are talking about coal or if you are discussing fertilizers, I think these are all relevant examples to reach really long term understatings between us," the foreign minister highlighted.

India's trade and economic ties with Central Asia over the last decade have shown a very strong positive trend. Mutual trade was less than $500 million a decade ago in 2014.

Today, "what we have collectively is actually a trade volume which is almost touching $2 billion. However, this figure does not reflect the full potential. The need to address this is today even more urgent because of the uncertainties of the international economy and this requires governments and businesses to work together in tandem, which is why all of us are here in this room," EAM Jaishankar noted.

He also laid out five solutions to further bolster the India-Central Asia economic ties: Digital Economy and Innovation, Financial Services, Healthcare and Pharma, improving connectivity and streamlining Transit Procedures.

"In addition to all of this, I think you would agree that tourism, education, films, and cultural exchanges, these are all important, they should be tapped for their economic and business potential," he mentioned.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Rahul K.
This is a very strategic move by our EAM. Central Asia is rich in natural resources while India has strong pharma and tech sectors - perfect complementarity! 🇮🇳 The $2 billion trade figure is good but we should aim for $20 billion in next 5 years. Digital economy focus is brilliant!
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Priya M.
Finally some focus on Central Asia beyond just security issues! 👏 The tourism potential is huge - imagine Indian tourists visiting Silk Road cities and Central Asians coming to our cultural sites. But we need better flight connectivity first. Hope this council delivers concrete plans.
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Arjun S.
While the vision is good, implementation will be key. We've heard such promises before. The Chabahar port was supposed to be our gateway to Central Asia but progress has been slow. Hope this time there's more action than just talk. Still, kudos for the comprehensive approach covering multiple sectors.
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Sunita T.
The pharma sector mention is crucial! During COVID, India proved itself as pharmacy of the world. Now we should become pharmacy of Central Asia too. Also love the cultural exchange angle - Bollywood films could be our soft power there just like in Afghanistan before. 🎬
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Vikram J.
Energy security is the real game here. With unstable Middle East and Russia-Ukraine war, we need reliable partners for uranium, oil and gas. Central Asia can be that partner if we play our cards right. The long-term contracts idea shows Jaishankar's strategic thinking.
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Neha P.
As someone from Gujarat, I know how our businesses can benefit from Central Asian markets. But government needs to simplify export procedures and provide more information about these markets. Hope this council includes actual SME representatives, not just big corporates.

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