Current Affairs7 Aug, 2025The HinduDecoding China — the...
GS 2: International Relations

Decoding China — the lessons for a vulnerable India, Pg 6.

China has withdrawn over 300 engineers from Foxconn’s iPhone 17 facilities in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka, while simultaneously restricting exports of critical minerals and high-end equipment, signaling a geo-economic strategy to hinder India's rise in manufacturing.

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Key Highlights:

  • Over 300 Chinese engineers withdrawn from Foxconn’s Indian iPhone manufacturing lines.
  • China imposes export restrictions on rare earths (gallium, germanium, graphite) vital for EVs and electronics.
  • Informal trade curbs on capital equipment and specialized machinery introduced via delays and verbal orders.
  • These actions disrupt technology transfer, supply chains, and cost predictability for Indian firms.
  • China aims to retain its dominance in high-value manufacturing and prevent India’s self-sufficiency.
  • India’s dependency on imports and nascent manufacturing ecosystem make it vulnerable.
  • China’s measures coincide with domestic pressures, including demographic decline and economic imbalance.

Detailed Insights:

  • Geo-economic Strategy: China is leveraging control over raw materials, human capital, and production equipment to slow India's transition to a competitive manufacturing hub.
  • Technology Transfer Blockade: The recall of skilled engineers impairs India’s access to tacit knowledge vital for assembly line optimization, automation, and efficiency gains.
  • Critical Minerals Monopoly: China’s curbs on exporting rare earth magnets and critical inputs aim to limit India’s capabilities in EVs, semiconductors, and consumer electronics.
  • Strategic Export Leverage: China uses industrial overcapacity and aggressive pricing (e.g., by BYD in EVs) to undercut competitors globally.
  • Domestic Drivers of External Strategy:
    • Demographic pressures from an aging, shrinking population.
    • Real estate crisis weakening household wealth and consumption.
    • Rising welfare liabilities and declining export revenues threatening fiscal balance.
  • Friend-shoring Challenge: India’s rise is viewed as part of the Western pivot away from China, prompting pre-emptive sabotage of India’s value-chain emergence.
  • Strategic Autonomy Concern: Recent U.S. tariff hikes on Indian goods (up to 50%) versus China’s temporary tariff exemptions expose alliance asymmetries, emphasizing the need for independent strategic positioning.
  • Internal Gaps in India: Weak infrastructure, regulatory bottlenecks, and over-dependence on imported components hamper India's ambition to rival China.
  • Global Power Projection: China is extending its reach through Belt and Road-like partnerships in ASEAN, Africa, and Latin America to consolidate geo-economic influence.

Concepts Involved:

  • Rare Earth Elements (REEs): A group of 17 metals essential for electronics, renewable energy, EVs, and defense tech; China controls 80–90% of global refining capacity.
  • Friend-shoring: A strategy where supply chains are relocated to geopolitically aligned countries to reduce dependence on adversarial nations.
  • Industrial Overcapacity: A condition where production exceeds domestic demand, leading to dumping and price suppression in global markets.
  • Technology Transfer: The process of moving skills, knowledge, and manufacturing capabilities across borders, often through human capital and embedded systems.
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