CHINA'S GAME OF SHATRANJ


* For those who don't know, 'shatranj' means the game of chess. *

We all know that one person, who pops into our lives from nowhere, shows us our grave despair, make us feel hollow about things we are struggling for, for things we couldn’t achieve yet. He, like a prophecy, tells us that there is a light at the end of the dark tunnel. And don’t worry, you aren’t lost because here he is, your yonder star. But life has never been such a fairy tale, has it? The shoulder on which we cried once, the hands that we held, has many a time not only hurt but abused us to their advantage.
Foreign Direct Investment or FDI is a symbiotic relationship between Foreign investors and local corporations. Most startups are not capital intensive and hence foreign investors fuel their growth in the competitive markets. While the investors by acquiring a dominant proportion of such assets, corporations expand their market by quickly acquiring upcoming strategies, equipment, technology, capital, and new products. They have also used such an opportunity to dump their products in our emerging markets.
China has always been in the top 20 foreign investors in India. Department for Promotion of Industry And Internal Trade quoted China to have invested US $2.38 billion. since March 2000. China not only captured a section of the consumer base in India but dominated its market in both the strata of our dual economy.

ECONOMIC THREATS

India has dual economic system which essentially means the existence of two separate economic sectors divided by different levels of income, education, and technology. Let us classify them as the lower economic group and the higher economic group. Chinese investors have maneuvered its way to both the groups by catering to their demands at a relatively cheaper cost.  Xiaomi, Oppo, One Plus, Huawei, Vivo, Lenovo, and many other Chinese mobile phone companies have dominated the Indian markets and this sector is highly dependent on Chinese products since we lack indigenous productions at par with the market competition.
Technology dominates lifestyle in urban areas, from food, clothing, daily essentials to payment portals. Chinese applications like SHAREit, PUBG mobile, Tik Tok, Shein, UC Browser are amongst the top software applications used in India. India surpassed the number of Chinese download of TikTok by 293.6 million, which means they earned thrice the revenue from India than it earned from China. The Tik Tok app uses the SIM region code to trace its users, one cannot avert it by using any VPN. Can you imagine the extent of data points the firm has stored in reference to its customer base? The possession of these data points by China is a threat to Indian democracy. One should take lessons from the Cambridge Analytica, where data points can not only be used to manipulate you but upturn a democracy, change the political demography of a country.
China didn’t stop there, it kept meddling with Indian startups and corporations too. The Foreign Policy think tank: Gateway House remarked that investments made by our neighbouring countries hold influence due to the nature of investments they make. This remark came after China’s Central Bank bought a 1.01% stake in HDFC which is speculated to be an opportunistic acquisition.
China’s biggest investment firms, Alibaba, ByteDance, Tencent funds 92 Indian Startups including Paytm, Byju, Oyo, Ola, Swiggy, Zomato, BigBasket, Hike, Delhivery, Make My Trip, Policy Bazaar, Rivigo, Quikr, Flipkart, Snapdeal, Uddan, and Dream 11. These Indian origin firms dominate our daily activities. In the case of a row with China, it has the power to dismantle our economy.
From the data obtained from the official reports of FDI in India published by the Department for Promotion of Industry And Internal Trade, it can be predicted that China is capable of investing around US$2.65 billion in India by thefourth quarter of 2020.

Model formula:       ( Quarter of MONTH^3 + Quarter of MONTH^2 + Quarter of MONTH + intercept )  R2=0.985      p-value<0.0001



Model formula:
( Quarter of MONTH^3 + Quarter of MONTH^2 + Quarter of MONTH + intercept )
Number of modeled observations:
16
Model degrees of freedom:
4
Residual degrees of freedom (DF):
12
SSE (sum squared error):
23633.4
MSE (mean squared error):
1969.45
R-Squared:
0.985589
Standard error:
44.3785
p-value (significance):
< 0.0001

GEO-POLITICAL THREATS

“ China is the world’s factory, India can be its office”- remarked billion banker, Uday Kotak. But the matter is more grave than what it seems to be. China is a strategic player, it is trying to weaken the Indian economy while acquiring a series of military bases surrounding India, conventionally called the string of pearls.


China has made strategic investments in Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Myanmar in the name of facilitating trade. According to Harvard Business Review, ‘ a dozen countries owe a debt of at least 20% of their nominal GDP to China”. Pakistan owes China US$ 6.7 billion which is more than double the money it owes to IMF and so does Sri Lanka. Chinese can use this opportunity to form military bases around India in the case of war.
When the world is suffering from a global pandemic, birthed and spread by China, the economic crisis is at its peak since the last two decades, China is creating political chaos in Nepal,  Hongkong, Tibet. They are militarizing at the  Indian Borders in Arunachal Pradesh and Kashmir. As Sonam Wangchuk, rightly said, that the revenue that the Chinese earn because of us is used to buy ammunitions for the army and to strengthen economic and political corridors against India. The beast in China is awake, their masterplan of global domination can be fatal to us and our economy. This battle against China can be won not by battle but by changing our consumer behaviour.










Comments

  1. Interesting that you predicted this just based on early to close signs of people calling out China's Debt trap policy. Although your model seems to be overfitted and considering you've taken variables that have a direct and established relationship with the FDI, I think it has a narrow perspective. Well, kudos for seeing it anyway!

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