Naushad’s opinion column in the Business Standard: Towards a US+1 world

Towards a US+1 world 

The world needs to return to a strong rules-based international order – one step  at a time.  

China dominates global manufacturing, currently accounting for 32 percent of world  output. The US, Japan, Germany, India and South Korea follow at 16, 7, 5, 3 and 3  percent respectively. China is also the world’s largest trader (#1 in exports, #2 in  imports) and by far the largest exporter of manufactured goods, from both Chinese and  foreign companies. The world has sought to diversify from this overwhelming  concentration in one country through China+1 geo-economics. While China remains a  key manufacturing source, other countries, including India, seek to be that +1. As the  world diversifies its geo-economic reliance on one country, we should also diversify our  geo-political reliance on a single nation. 

What constitutes world leadership? The US emerged from the second world war  with a dominant economy (accounting for 60 percent of world manufacturing output)  and by far the strongest military. Several multinational institutions were constructed  for the post-war period: the United Nations, the World Bank and IMF, the World Health Organisation, the World Trade Organisation (that developed out of Gatt), the  International Court of Justice, and so on. These organisations have varied in  effectiveness and credibility, but they gained their strength, particularly from the US’  support – and willingness to target any country with consequences if it didn’t follow the  rules. The US itself did not adhere completely to multilateral rules, but it did so enough  to give them credibility. US leadership got other countries, starting with its allies, to  follow these rules broadly too. And when a crisis hit, the US used its convening power  to bring countries together – the G20 emerged from the financial crises of 1997 and  2009. The world needs to diversify from overwhelming reliance on US leadership. Our  experience of President Trump I should tell us what to expect from President Donald  Trump II: a further move away from multilateral institutions and their rules, and an  increasingly inward-focused US. We should not seek to replace the US in international  affairs, but develop a US+1 approach. How? 

“A Rules-based International Order”: Many countries, India included, claim to  subscribe to this concept. In international affairs, this says that national sovereignty  over territory is sacrosanct. In trade, rules prevent tariffs that differentiate between 

countries based on whether you like them or not (the so-called Most Favoured Nation  provision). In maritime affairs, it says that a country has territorial jurisdiction for 12  nautical miles (and not an entire sea even if it’s called South China). In aviation,  commercial flights from all airlines are permitted in peacetime over a country’s territory.  And in climate change (with special salience as Delhi overtakes Lahore as the world’s  most polluted city), it emphasises all countries must have a common goal of net zero  carbon emissions to limit global warming.  

That partial list says both how dependent the world is on international rules and how  effective they have been. For example, we take for granted that we can fly from India  to Europe by the shortest route. But trouble between Israel and Iran means we take an extra hour to avoid overflying both countries. Or the Russia-Ukraine War means  that a US airline can’t take the non-stop polar route from India to North America. This  same list says that the sanctity of a rules-based order suffers when we breach these rules, whether in a big way, such as Russia invading Ukraine or China claiming islands  off the coast of the Philippines or Arunachal Pradesh, or in a smaller way, such as we  abstaining from UN resolutions condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, or ignoring  a WTO ruling against us on ICT (information and communication technology) trade.  What can be done? 

How do you eat an elephant? Our eventual destination is clear: enough like-minded  countries subscribing to a rules-based international order so the pressure to follow  them becomes overwhelming. But while our eventual destination must be ambitious,  we must start on the elephant one mouthful at a time. Let’s begin with an initial set of  the twenty largest economies in the world, without the US, China and Russia: Japan,  South Korea, Australia, Canada (OK, post Trudeau), Indonesia, Germany, France,  Italy, Spain, Switzerland, the Netherlands, the UK, Brazil, Mexico, Turkey, Saudi  Arabia, and, of course, India. These countries account for over one-third of world gross  domestic product and three-fourths of the G20. 

We should follow three principles: 

First, do not expect the full group to agree on anything. Instead, take each area of  cooperation – maritime, trade, sovereignty and non-interference, health, climate,  aviation, etc., and look for say three or four like-minded countries on that particular issue  to put together the international rules they will voluntarily and publicly abide by. India, 

I would hope, would want to be in most of the groups, but that’s not essential – it’s all  voluntary. (This also fits with our policy of strategic autonomy, where we align around  specific interests, not permanent alliances.) Each grouping should attempt to copy and  not invent: if an existing multilateral agreement covers the same ground, as it will, start  with that; if an existing multilateral institution is working in an area, get them to take on  the responsibility of running the programme (the simplest and most effective approach  would be to just publicly support its work). The WTO Joint Statement Initiative which  enables groups of aligned members to work together without universal consensus is a  good model. 

Second, having framed the rules in a particular area, ensure that all within the list of  twenty-seven countries are clear they are actively welcome and encouraged to sign up  for that initiative. Indeed, make participation open to all other countries too. And the  lead countries for an issue should particularly encourage the US to join, and, indeed,  China to join too. The goal is to be inclusive and participatory, not exclusive and pure. 

And third, there are consequences for joining. Joining is voluntary, but once one joins  a particular initiative it requires adherence to the rules whether they work in one’s  favour or not on a particular issue or at a particular time. Any transgression, however  small, means the country has to exit the initiative, which must be made public.  Readmission requires an overwhelming majority of all the members of that initiative.  

Can this work? Start with the simplest, easiest or most popular area: climate? Maritime  boundaries? Commercial aviation? Shipping security? And seek leadership for it.  Maybe an off-agenda meeting at the G20 could kick something off? And maybe a  country that aspires to speak for the Global South might be the first mover? If that  reads like a hint for India to take the lead, you got it in one guess! The post-war  international institutions developed in a somewhat similar manner, but with the US  playing the key formative role. We need many +1s to now play this role for the world  we wish to live in.  

Naushad Forbes 

ndforbes@forbesmarshall.com 

Co-Chairman Forbes Marshall, Past President CII, Chairman of Centre for Technology  Innovation and Economic Research and Ananta Aspen Centre. His book, The Struggle  and the Promise has been published by HarperCollins. 

(Published in Business Standard, 21st November 2024)