President Trump's tariff war is driven by domestic politics, economic interests, and checking China's rise.
Tariffs are a super-tax on American companies and consumers, with 70% of costs absorbed by them.
India's textiles, jewellery, gems, auto components, and metals sectors are severely impacted by discriminatory tariffs.
The U.S. has not levied tariffs on China due to Chinese restrictions on rare metals critical to U.S. defense.
India needs to champion multipolarity as an alternative to unipolarity and bipolarity.
Detailed Insights:
Trump's economic warfare is motivated by pandering to America's silent majority, bolstering America's economic strength, and reversing deindustrialization.
The U.S. is pressuring India to eschew protections for the agricultural sector while imposing high tariff walls on certain products.
India needs to re-examine its geopolitical convergence with America, given the U.S.'s renewed vows to Pakistan and other actions.
Prime Minister Modi's foreign policy adventurism has not furthered India's strategic interests and must be re-calibrated.
India must leverage the polycrisis to reshape the world's geo-economic and political architecture and champion multipolarity.
The government must redress India's structural problems, including low manufacturing, high unemployment, and stagnant private investment.
Key Concepts Involved:
Multipolarity: A world order with multiple centers of power, as opposed to unipolarity (one dominant power) or bipolarity (two dominant powers).
Neoliberalism: An economic ideology emphasizing free markets, deregulation, and privatization.
Tariffs: Taxes imposed on imported goods, often used to protect domestic industries.