Key Points

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is meeting his Japanese counterpart Shigeru Ishiba to strengthen their countries' strategic partnership. This collaboration is increasingly focused on driving inclusive growth and development across the Global South. A key strategy involves creating a new supply chain where Africa provides raw materials, India handles processing, and Japan consumes the final products. This visit underscores the deep and growing ties between India and Japan as they position themselves as leaders for the developing world.

Key Points: Modi Ishiba Meet to Boost India Japan Ties for Global South

  • Modi and Ishiba to review Special Strategic and Global Partnership
  • Discuss defence, security, trade, and technology cooperation
  • JICA invests $40M in fund for SMEs in Asia and Africa
  • Partnership aims for inclusive growth across the developing world
3 min read

India, Japan ties to benefit Global South

PM Modi meets Japanese PM Ishiba to strengthen strategic partnership, focusing on Africa investments and a China-plus-one supply chain strategy for the Global South.

"A 'China-plus-one' strategy is emerging, where Africa provides raw materials... further processing occurs in India, and Japanese industries consume the refined products - Gurjit Singh"

New Delhi, Aug 26

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in his meeting with his Japanese counterpart Shigeru Ishiba this week, will review the Special Strategic and Global Partnership between India and Japan, including defence and security, trade and economy, technology and innovation, as well as discuss issues of regional and global importance.

The visit, which will reaffirm the longstanding special bond of friendship between the two countries, also comes close on the heels of the Africa summit hosted by Japan last week. With India already playing a key role as a leader of the developing countries, foreign affairs experts see the possibility of the India–Japan partnership, positioning itself as a force for inclusive growth across the developing region and the Global South.

Japan has already made investments in some infrastructure projects in African countries. "Through such projects, Japan aims to leverage the Indian Ocean as a highway of commerce connecting Africa with India and Japan. The long-term vision is not just about ports and railways but also about embedding Africa into critical mineral supply chains. A 'China-plus-one' strategy is emerging, where Africa provides raw materials, initial processing is undertaken locally to add value, further processing occurs in India, and Japanese industries consume the refined products," according to an article by retired IFS officer Gurjit Singh published in Outlook.

The Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) has just announced an investment of $40 million in India’s Aavishkaar Capital's Global Supply Chain Support Fund to promote sustainable small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in Asia and Africa. This partnership aims to accelerate the growth of impact-driven companies within agriculture, food processing, and manufacturing supply chains, contributing to the economic development of emerging markets and strengthening Indo-Japanese cooperation. This could serve as a pointer for further investments involving the private sector to develop the Global South.

PM Modi will embark on his journey on August 29, which also marks his first annual summit with PM Ishiba. Ever since PM Modi assumed office in 2014, it will be his eighth visit to the country, which highlights the deep ties between the two nations.

"The visit will reaffirm the longstanding special bond of friendship between the two countries," the statement added.

In the second leg of his visit, at the invitation of China's President, Xi Jinping, Prime Minister Modi will travel to China from August 31 to September 1 to attend the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Summit in Tianjin. On the sidelines of the summit, the Prime Minister is expected to hold bilateral meetings with several leaders attending the Summit.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Hope this partnership actually benefits African nations and doesn't become another form of economic colonialism. The focus should be on sustainable development and technology transfer, not just resource extraction.
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Aman W
Japan's investment in Indian SMEs through Aavishkaar Capital is a smart move. This will create jobs and boost manufacturing capabilities in both India and Africa. More such collaborations needed!
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Sarah B
Interesting how Modi is balancing relationships with both Japan and China in the same trip. Shows India's strategic positioning in global politics. The SCO summit right after Japan visit is particularly noteworthy.
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Vikram M
Eighth visit to Japan since 2014! That's some serious diplomatic engagement. Japan has been one of our most reliable partners in technology and infrastructure. Hope this translates into more bullet train projects and manufacturing partnerships.
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Nisha Z
The focus on critical mineral supply chains is crucial for our renewable energy and electronics industries. Africa has the resources, India has the processing capabilities, and Japan has the technology - perfect synergy! 🙌

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