Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his Japanese counterpart
Shinzo Abe, on his second visit
to this country, will consider a plan for an economic corridor linking South Asia with Southeast Asia as the two strategic partners look for synergy in boosting economic growth and Asian security in a visit that is being watched closely by the rest of the world.
Also on the table during Abe's three-day visit will be an investment fund to help technology cooperation and joint ventures.
Economic Corridor
The two prime ministers will discuss financing and building of a network of roads and ports linking South Asia with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), which is forming an economic community by 2015. The network will have two components - an East-West corridor linking India with Bangladesh, Myanmar and Thailand and a North-South corridor running through Bhutan and Nepal to south India. The Japanese government will provide yen loans for the projects.
The Japanese Prime Minister has been cited for his "Abenomics" model, which mixes fiscal stimulus, monetary stimulus and corporate reform that pulled Japan out of deflation and led to a rise in growth last year. He is also reforming Japan's national security institutions, seeking greater alignment with other maritime democracies like India to balance a rising China.
Strategic Move
There is a strategic objective behind the corridor plan as the rise of China has become a constant variable in the bilateral relation and geopolitics of the Indo-Pacific region. Abe's visit is taking place at a time when questions over the sustainability of the US "re-balancing" towards Asia is growing due to fiscal constraints and domestic politics.
Diplomatic observers see the corridor project as Abe's answer to Chinese-led projects to link southern China with South Asia by road and rail.
"The dividends of growth in Asia must not be wasted on military expansion. We must use it to invest in innovation and human capital which will further boost growth in the region," Abe told government, business and civil-society leaders at the ongoing World Economic Forum in Davos, alluding to China's growing military build-up.
Experts say the Japanese interest in the corridor lies in the fact that it would improve supply chains of companies and facilitate trade.
Simultaneously, Abe has been looking to relax the ban on arms exports and forging international defence industrial cooperation.
Creaking and underdeveloped infrastructure have been a hindrance to growth and trade barrier for India. During the ASEAN Summit in Brunei last October, Japan had vowed to support India's development by meeting its infrastructure needs.
Both Indian and Japanese officials said Abe's trip had been designed to reinforce and reinvigorate bilateral relations in a wide range of fields as well as their strategic global partnership, that include ensuring maritime security in the Indian Ocean.
Japan maintains its naval presence in the Indian Ocean and India is bolstering its engagement in the western Pacific. Last month, the two countries held a joint exercise in the Bay of Bengal. For the first time in 2012, both held joint exercises in the north Pacific.
India thus will be the fifth country where Japan will have attaches from the three wings of the SDF after the US, China, South Korea and Russia.
to this country, will consider a plan for an economic corridor linking South Asia with Southeast Asia as the two strategic partners look for synergy in boosting economic growth and Asian security in a visit that is being watched closely by the rest of the world.
Also on the table during Abe's three-day visit will be an investment fund to help technology cooperation and joint ventures.
Economic Corridor
The two prime ministers will discuss financing and building of a network of roads and ports linking South Asia with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), which is forming an economic community by 2015. The network will have two components - an East-West corridor linking India with Bangladesh, Myanmar and Thailand and a North-South corridor running through Bhutan and Nepal to south India. The Japanese government will provide yen loans for the projects.
The Japanese Prime Minister has been cited for his "Abenomics" model, which mixes fiscal stimulus, monetary stimulus and corporate reform that pulled Japan out of deflation and led to a rise in growth last year. He is also reforming Japan's national security institutions, seeking greater alignment with other maritime democracies like India to balance a rising China.
Strategic Move
There is a strategic objective behind the corridor plan as the rise of China has become a constant variable in the bilateral relation and geopolitics of the Indo-Pacific region. Abe's visit is taking place at a time when questions over the sustainability of the US "re-balancing" towards Asia is growing due to fiscal constraints and domestic politics.
Diplomatic observers see the corridor project as Abe's answer to Chinese-led projects to link southern China with South Asia by road and rail.
"The dividends of growth in Asia must not be wasted on military expansion. We must use it to invest in innovation and human capital which will further boost growth in the region," Abe told government, business and civil-society leaders at the ongoing World Economic Forum in Davos, alluding to China's growing military build-up.
Experts say the Japanese interest in the corridor lies in the fact that it would improve supply chains of companies and facilitate trade.
Simultaneously, Abe has been looking to relax the ban on arms exports and forging international defence industrial cooperation.
Creaking and underdeveloped infrastructure have been a hindrance to growth and trade barrier for India. During the ASEAN Summit in Brunei last October, Japan had vowed to support India's development by meeting its infrastructure needs.
Both Indian and Japanese officials said Abe's trip had been designed to reinforce and reinvigorate bilateral relations in a wide range of fields as well as their strategic global partnership, that include ensuring maritime security in the Indian Ocean.
Japan maintains its naval presence in the Indian Ocean and India is bolstering its engagement in the western Pacific. Last month, the two countries held a joint exercise in the Bay of Bengal. For the first time in 2012, both held joint exercises in the north Pacific.
India thus will be the fifth country where Japan will have attaches from the three wings of the SDF after the US, China, South Korea and Russia.
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