Responding to an assertive China
No longer can New Delhi afford to live in denial about the rising influence of the Chinese juggernaut
No longer can New Delhi afford to live in denial about the rising influence of the Chinese juggernaut
Despite its late start, a relatively open society and a rising population may just push the India economy ahead of the Chinese juggernaut
In a bid to end its dependence on foreign intellectual property and become a global power in science and technology, China is attempting to foster indigenous innovation. Are the U.S. government and business community right to be worried about threats to free trade and intellectual property rights?
The world’s leading international institutions may be outmoded, but Brazil, China, India, and South Africa are not ready to join the helm. Their shaky commitment to democracy, human rights, nuclear nonproliferation, and environmental protection would only weaken the international system’s core values.
A conversation on the role of the media in India-China relations with Pallavi Aiyar, author of Smoke and Mirrors: An Experience of China
China has now clearly emerged as a major world power and India needs to seriously think about how it will engage its neighbour over the twenty-first century. The future of the Sino-Indian relationship will be both competitive and collaborative as the same time.
The Chinese people might not share their government’s bellicosity towards India. The authoritarian leadership in Beijing may be out of step with domestic opinion when it beats the India drum.
An analysis of China's new foreign investment policy and what it means for foreign investors.
Tensions over visas and diplomatic standoffs between India and China serve as a precursor for the bitterness that will ensue in their relationship unless there are significant advances in the bilateral relationship