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The Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, has said that globalisation is both an opportunity and a challenge. Speaking at the India Today Conclave here this evening, the Prime Minister said that no one could have imagined a decade ago that India would be a major software services exporter and that a new process of brain gain, rather than brain drain would be created by these new opportunities. The growth of the knowledge economy had opened up new markets for science and technology based products. In manufacturing too there were global opportunities that would have to be tapped. We would like to make globalisation a win win game. How we deal with the challenge of globalisation and how we make use of its opportunities will shape our relations with the world and the worlds perception of our capabilities as a nation. I do believe that this has already happened in substantial measure, he added.
The following is the text of the Prime Ministers address:
I am truly delighted to be in your midst this evening at this conclave, which has now become such an integral part of the calendar events in our capital city.
At the outset, I would like to congratulate you, both for the original initiative behind the India Today Conclave, and for persevering with this event. This Conclave facilitates a dialogue between civil society and representatives of Government, and between Indian and foreign scholars, thinkers, academics and leaders. I welcome such opportunities because the real strength of our democracy lies in our ability to conduct such a dialogue on a continuing basis. The test of the vibrancy and resilience of a democracy is not just the ability to conduct elections and convene legislatures. It lies in a societys ability to communicate with itself and with the outside world through civilized modes of interaction. We are, like any real democracy, an argumentative society! The right to disagree and the freedom to debate are hallmarks of such societies. I therefore greatly value these opportunities where contending and contentious ideas can be considered calmly.
I also congratulate the India Today Group on its emergence as the worlds window on India. However, I do believe that with your global reach, your organization should increasingly seek to become Indias window to the world as well. For this, it is essential that leading media organizations in our country must invest in Indian correspondents overseas to offer your readers an Indian perspective on international affairs. For India to be more meaningfully engaged with the world, we need an informed Indian view of world events and an Indian perspective on global trends.
In the nine months that our Government has been in office, I have frequently spoken about our agenda and priorities in office. I sincerely believe that our people voted for the United Progressive Alliance because they wanted government to adhere more closely to the fundamental principles on which our Republic has been founded. Our Nation was built on the foundations of a deep and abiding commitment to the values of liberal, social democracy, pluralism, secularism, multi-culturalism and the principles of equity, social justice and the rule of law are core values of our civilization and the bedrock of our Republic.
Many in India and abroad who admire this legacy of ours were deeply concerned by the emergence in recent years of communalism and majoritarianism in our body politic. If these insidious trends had not been checked, India would not have been the India that our freedom fighters had sought to create. There are bound to be voices of intolerance and extremism at the margin of any free society, and a democracy must learn to deal with such fringe groups, albeit within the framework of the rule of law. However, I truly believe that the central tendency of any modern and civilized society today can only be towards respect for pluralism.
Indeed, if there is an idea of India by which India should be defined, it is that of an inclusive, open, multi-cultural, multi-ethnic, multi-lingual society. I believe that this is the dominant trend of human evolution of all societies in the 21st century. Therefore, we have an obligation to history and mankind to show that pluralism works. India must show that democracy can deliver development and also empower the marginalized. Liberal democracy is the natural order of political organization in todays world. All alternate systems, authoritarian and majoritarian in varying degrees, are aberrations.
While all democratic societies do face internal challenges for a variety of reasons, the particular advantage of democracy lies in its ability to handle such situations with calm and with maturity. Our own experience has shown us that democratic methods yield the most enduring solutions to even the most intractable problems. Authoritarian responses cannot solve the real problems of the people or make life worth living. They merely contain the fall-out, often for very limited periods of time; and with possible negative consequences that, in the long run, make the remedy worse than the disease itself. In the particular context of turbulence in our neighbourhood, it is a matter of great pride for us to have received this week the President of the youngest democracy in our region. I refer to President Karzai of Afghanistan, who has shown great courage in sowing the seeds of democracy. We are confident that the friendly people of Afghanistan will soon reap the fruits of this political evolution in full measure.
If our commitment to remain an open society is one of the pillars of our nationhood, the other is our commitment to remain an open economy. An economy that guarantees the freedom of enterprise, respects individual creativity, and at the same time mobilizes public investment for social infrastructure and the development of human capabilities. Indeed, it would be no exaggeration to suggest that these are the principles to which all countries will increasingly want to adhere. In relating to the world, we must never lose sight of this vital aspect of our Nationhood.
Just as developed industrial economies enabled Economies in Transition to graduate into open economies, developed democracies should also assist Societies in Transition to become open societies. I believe Indias policies towards the world have been shaped by this commitment to the core values of our Nationhood. We should be proud to identify with those who defend the values of liberal democracy and secularism across the world.
Over the past decade and more, the debate in this country on the nature of our interaction with the world, with our wider Asian neighbourhood and with major world powers, has also been shaped by the sweeping changes in our economic policy. The initiatives we took in the early 1990s towards economic liberalization have not only altered the nature of our interaction with the world, but have also shaped global perceptions of India. Indeed, they have shaped more than mere perceptions. They have also altered the manner in which other nations, big and small, relate with us. Today, there is a greater willingness internationally to work with India and build relationships of mutual benefit and mutual inter-dependence. This augurs well for our development and for our security.
The steps that successive governments have taken since 1991 have helped to finally remove what development planners used to refer to in the 1960s and 1970s as the external constraint on growth. Indian industry and our professionals have demonstrated to the world their ability to step out with confidence from a highly protected environment into a mercilessly competitive one. We do have a vast unfinished agenda of social and economic reform and development, as outlined in our National Common Minimum Programme (NCMP), and our Governments highest priority will be to implement this. Doing so will further enable us to deal with the challenges of globalization.
I submit to you for your consideration the idea that the global environment has never been more conducive for Indias economic development than it is today. The world wants India to do well. However, we recognize that our real challenges are at home. It is for this reason that the National Common Minimum Programme places such great emphasis on increasing investment in infrastructure, agriculture, health and education, urban renewal and the ushering in of the knowledge economy. Having ensured that there is today no external constraint on growth, we must now ensure that there remain no internal constraints to development. That is what the NCMP aims to achieve. And this is the goal to which I commit our Government to work diligently.
To say, however, that the external constraint on growth is no longer binding is not to suggest that we are making full use of the new opportunities. There is much more we can do to draw on global savings and to tap global markets. As a developing economy we must draw on international resources to fuel our development to a greater extent than we have done in the past. We should be more open to global capital flows and better prepared to take advantage of new markets for goods and services. India, rightly, is wholly committed to multilateralism in trade. But we will seek the reform and democratization of multilateral institutions. At the same time, India will strengthen South-South co-operation aimed at enabling all nations of the South to regain their rightful place in the comity of Nations.
Globalization is both an opportunity and a challenge. A decade ago, who could have imagined that India would be a major software services exporter and that a new process of brain gainnot brain drain--would be created by opportunities in the software sector. However, we must ask ourselves, are we doing enough to secure this edge? The growth of our knowledge economy has opened up new markets for science and technology-based products. Again, are we doing enough to encourage this process? In manufacturing too there are new global opportunities that we must tap. The end of the multi-fibre agreement opens up new opportunities for trade in textiles. We must ensure that we are ready to take advantage of these openings.
We would like to make globalization a win-win game. How we deal with the challenge of globalization and how we make use of its opportunities will shape our relations with the outside world, and the perception of our capabilities as a nation. I do believe that this has already happened in substantial measure. Our relations with major powers, especially the United States and more recently China, have increasingly been shaped by key economic factors. Who could have imagined a decade ago that China would emerge as our second largest trading partner? In the case of the U.S., an acceleration of people-to-people contact and the consequent business-to-business interaction has had an enormous impact on our State-to-State relations. Shared values and growing economic links have enabled a closer strategic engagement.
Similarly, business and commerce also underpin our strategic partnership with the European Union. I also believe that our strategic partnership with the Russian Federation can be enriched by a greater focus on revitalizing our bilateral economic relations. Even our approach to the wider Asian neighbourhood has been so influenced by economic factors. The countries of East and South-East Asia have become important economic partners for us and this has encouraged them to be more welcoming of us. The prospect of renewed cooperation in the economic field is giving a new profile to our relations with Japan, with aid and investment flows from Japan set to increase. Our concern for energy security has become an important element of our diplomacy and is shaping our relations with a range of countries across the globe, in our neighbourhood, in West Asia, in Central Asia, in Africa and in Latin America.
It is also interesting to note that the response of other countries to our national security concerns is being shaped by perceptions of business and economic opportunities. Countries that imposed sanctions on India when we declared ourselves a nuclear weapons power are now building bridges with us, to utilize opportunities for mutual economic benefit. There is today growing recognition of India as a responsible nuclear power. We reaffirm our willingness to work with the international community to prevent the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and to work towards the ultimate goal of universal nuclear disarmament.
Regrettably, however, South Asia has been slow to recognize the win-win aspect of greater economic cooperation. While India has a set of bilateral relationships with its neighbours that vary in both political and economic intensity, the mere lowering of tariffs and pruning of negative lists does not add up to creating relations of mutual benefit. Greater connectivity, both in transport and communication links, and through the opening up of transit routes can transform our sub-continent into a web of economic and commercial links. We can jointly create reciprocal dependencies for mutual benefit. So far, this potentially benign process has been hobbled by narrow political calculations. I sincerely want to promote a sense of partnership and the vision of a common destiny in South Asia to realize this regions vast latent development potential.
None of us in South Asia can under-estimate the role of economic inter-dependence in international relations. The example of the European Union, ASEAN, APEC, NAFTA and other regional groups shows that the most dynamic economies of the world are creating such relationships for mutual benefit, regional security and for promoting peace. Indeed, we seek to be more closely engaged with such regional groups. Our links with each of these groups is both civilizational and contemporary, with people of Indian origin acting as a cultural bridge between our multi-cultural societies.
The idea that economic considerations do play an important role in shaping a Nations foreign policy is not new. We in India were alerted to this reality at our very birth as a Republic when Jawaharlal Nehru first articulated his vision of Indian foreign policy in the Constituent Assembly legislature in December 1947. Panditji had said, and I quote:
Talking of Foreign policies, the House must remember that these are not just empty struggles on a chess board. Behind them lie all manner of things. Ultimately, foreign policy is the outcome of economic policy
.. It is well for us to say that we stand for peace and freedom and yet that does not convey much to anybody, except a pious hope. We do stand for peace and freedom
. Undoubtedly it has some substance, but a vague statement that we stand for peace and freedom by itself has no particular meaning, because every country is prepared to say the same thing, whether it means it or not. What then do we stand for? Well, Panditji went on to say you have to develop this argument in the economic field.
I submit to you that India is indeed developing this argument in the economic field. Our foreign policy is, of course, shaped by our civilizational values and our commitment to peace and freedom. But, as Panditji said, it is equally shaped by our commitment to our economic development and to the development of all developing economies, within the framework of an open society and an open economy. It is shaped by our yearning to recover our lost space in the global economy and our economic status in the comity of Nations. It is shaped by our desire to build bridges with our neighbours and our economic partners. It is shaped by our firm and sincere commitment to a future of shared peace, freedom and development in our neighbourhood.
Such are the principles on which we should engage the world and our partners. India, I am convinced, is destined to recover its due status in the world, but this process will be speeded up if we do what we must at home and build bridges of mutual inter-dependence with the world outside. I leave you with this thought as you proceed with the rest of your very interesting discussions and interactions with the distinguished speakers at your Conclave. I hope your efforts will throw more light on how we should deal with the challenges that lie ahead.
Thank you, and I wish your deliberations all success.
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DS/HS/HK/RK/LV
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