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BCIM Economic Corridor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Belt and Road Initiative infrastructure project

Map of Asia, showing the OBOR initiative
  China
  The six Belt and Road corridors
China in red, Members of theAsian Infrastructure Investment Bank in orange, the six corridors in black[1]

TheBangladesh, China, India and Myanmar Economic Corridor (BCIM) was a proposed road, rail, water and air link connectingIndia andChina throughMyanmar andBangladesh as acorridor.[2][3]

In 2015, China proposed including the corridor as part of its vision for theBelt and Road Initiative, China's signature global connectivity initiative. The BRI was boycotted by India from the start. In May 2019, the BCIM was not mentioned in a list of 35 corridors and projects in a joint communique issued by state leaders attending the 2nd Belt and Road Forum, indicating the BCIM had been dropped from the BRI. In the same year India has sought to keep the BCIM intact by sending a delegation to the 13th BCIM Forum inYuxi, noting however the corridor predates the BRI.[4] Ultimately, the corridor was abandoned due to BCIM's ties to the Belt and Road and the sharp deterioration inSino-Indian relations.[5]

The proposed corridor will cover 1.65 million square kilometres, encompassing an estimated 440 million people in China'sYunnan province, Bangladesh, Myanmar, andWest Bengal inEastern India through the combination of road, rail, water and air linkages in the region.[6] The BCIM envisages greater market access for goods, services and energy, elimination of non-tariff barriers, better trade facilitation, investment in infrastructure development, and joint exploration and development of mineral, water, and other natural resources.[7]

History

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Background

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The concept of economic cooperation within the BCIM region was first developed byRehman Sobhan who advocated that multi-modal transport connectivity and supported by other initiatives and infrastructure development could significantly reduce transaction costs, stimulate trade and investment and consequently accelerate growth and poverty alleviation in this region.[7]

Sobhan's pioneering ideas would eventually lead to the development of the platform in the 1990s which came to be known as the "Kunming Initiative". The first meeting of the Initiative was convened in 1999 inKunming; presided by a number of representative organisations such asThe Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD) from Bangladesh,Centre for Policy Research (CPR) from India and Yunnan Academy of Social Sciences in Kunming, China; from the Myanmar side it was the Ministry of Trade which represented the country.[7]

The Kunming Initiative evolved into the BCIM Forum for Regional Cooperation during its first with the objective to create a platform where major stakeholders could meet and discuss issues in the context of promoting economic growth and trade in the BCIM region; identify specific sectors and projects which would promote greater collaboration among the BCIM nations; andstrengthen cooperation and institutional arrangements among the concerned key players and stakeholders to deepen BCIM ties.[8]

Over the years, the Kunming initiative developed into what came to be popularly known as the BCIM Forum. Successive BCIM Forums were held annually making a seminal contribution in raising awareness about the potential benefits accruing from the BCIM cooperation. BCIM cooperation also started to feature in intergovernmental discussions, at highest political levels, as was recounted above. The initial vision of the Kunming initiative was to gradually steer the endeavour from an essentially civil society (Track II) to an intergovernmental (Track I) one where political buy-in and intergovernmental ownership would be key to realising the vision and the objectives of the initiative.[7]

Initial steps

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One of the most recent developments to the BCIM came to fruition during the meeting between Chinese PremierLi Keqiang and Indian Prime MinisterManmohan Singh in 2013.[9] Li's visit marked the first time high-ranking officials had discussed the trade corridor. Furthermore, earlier in the year, the first ever BCIM car rally was held betweenKolkata andKunming viaDhaka to highlight road connectivity in the four countries.[9]

On 18 December 2013, the four nations drew up a long discussed plan, emphasizing the need to quickly improve physical connectivity in the region, over two days of talks in the south-western Chinese city of Kunming – the provincial capital of Yunnan, which borders Myanmar – on Wednesday and Thursday.[10] This marked the formal endorsement of the BCIM EC by the four nations, whereby it was agreed that the corridor would run from Kunming to Kolkata, linkingMandalay inMyanmar as well asDhaka andChittagong in Bangladesh.[10]

The deep water port being enhanced atKyaukphyu, Myanmar is viewed as a gateway to the Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar (BCIM) Economic Corridor.[11]: 67 

Economic advantages

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The economic advantages of the BCIM trade corridor are considerable, most notably: access to numerous markets in Southeast Asia, improvement of transportation infrastructure and creation of industrial zones.[8][12]

The construction of industrial zones will have a twofold benefit. Firstly, it will lead to industrial transfer boosting industries such as processing, manufacturing and commerce logistics. Secondly, as labour costs rise in China, labour-intensive industries such as textile and agro processing will eventually be shifted out of China. These industries will need to be transferred to new regions with lower labour costs. Companies operating in China will likely give priority to the trade corridor region given its established infrastructure, improved logistics and ease of access[8][12]

India's isolated eastern andnorth-eastern states also stand to gain by higher trade and connectivity with China and the rest of Asia.[12]

Priority sector

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The eleven BCIM Forums, organised in rotation by the aforesaid institutions in the four countries, have highlighted the potential benefits of closer cooperation among the four countries in such areas as connectivity, trade, investment, energy, water management, tourism and other areas.[7] The four countries also agreed to encourage greater cooperation and exchanges in the BCIM region in the areas of education, sports and science and technology.[2]

Leadership and representation

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Bangladesh–China–India–Myanmar Forum for Regional Cooperation
Official languagesEnglish
Membership
Leaders

The Bangladesh–China–India–Myanmar Forum for Regional Cooperation (BCIM) is a sub-regional organisation of Asian nations aimed at greater integration of trade and investment between the four countries and the economic corridor has grown out of it.[13][14]

During the last held session in 2013, India was represented at this week's talks by Joint Secretary (East Asia) at the Ministry of External Affairs Gautam Bambawale, who was joined by the Deputy Planning Minister of Bangladesh, the Vice Chairman of China's National Development and Reform Commission, and a Senior economic affairs official from Myanmar.[10]

Cooperation with other corridors

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Through linking theASEAN Free Trade Area,ASEAN–China Free Trade Area and theASEAN–India Free Trade Area, the corridor would constitute as one of the largest free trade areas. Bangladesh, China, India and Myanmar hope to create a corridor that would effectively combine road, rail, water and air linkages in the region.[8] This will also improve foreign trade of the BCIM countries and empower bilateral trading.[12]

See also

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References

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  1. ^China Britain Business Council:One Belt One RoadArchived 2017-07-13 at theWayback Machine
  2. ^abDasgupta, Saibal (December 20, 2013)."Plan for economic corridor linking India to China approved".Times of India. RetrievedJune 9, 2014.
  3. ^"The BCIM economic corridor: Prospects and challenges".Observer Research Foundation. RetrievedFebruary 10, 2017.
  4. ^"Kunming meet revives BCIM link plan".Economic Times. June 24, 2019.
  5. ^Antara, Ghosal Singh (May 4, 2022)."China's Evolving Strategic Discourse on India • Stimson Center".Stimson Center. RetrievedJuly 8, 2023.
  6. ^"Bangladesh–China–India–Myanmar Economic Corridor Builds Steam".Asia Briefing. Dezan Shira and Associates. RetrievedJuly 1, 2014.
  7. ^abcdeRahman, Mustafizur (March 15, 2015)."BCIM-economic corridor: An emerging opportunity".The Daily Star. RetrievedJune 9, 2014.
  8. ^abcd"The Bangladesh–China–India–Myanmar Trade Corridor".Asia Briefing. Dezan Shira and Associates.
  9. ^abRashid, Harun Ur (November 12, 2013)."BCIM Economic Corridor: A Giant Step towards Integration".Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies (4172). RetrievedJuly 2, 2014.
  10. ^abcKrishnan, Anant (December 21, 2013)."BCIM corridor gets push after first official-level talks in China". Kasturi & Sons Ltd. The Hindu. RetrievedJuly 2, 2014.
  11. ^Curtis, Simon; Klaus, Ian (2024).The Belt and Road City: Geopolitics, Urbanization, and China's Search for a New International Order. New Haven and London:Yale University Press.ISBN 9780300266900.
  12. ^abcdLal, Neeta (November 6, 2013)."India and China Seek Economic Integration Via Burma, Bangladesh". The Irrawady. RetrievedJuly 2, 2014.
  13. ^"Experts hope for greater integration among Bangladesh, India, China and Myanmar in trade, investment".Xinhua. February 21, 2012. Archived fromthe original on March 4, 2016. RetrievedMay 1, 2012.
  14. ^"India Has a 'Look East Policy' Too". International.to. April 30, 2012. Archived fromthe original on August 12, 2019. RetrievedMay 1, 2012.

External links

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  1. ^Annex, Economic corridors and other projects catalyzed and supported by connectivity, 2019 Belt and Road Forum Joint Communique
  2. ^These projects and themes are not listed in the economic corridors list under the 2019 Annex but are frequently associated with the Belt and Road Initiative in media and scholarship.
  3. ^The Belt and Road Initiative: Progress, Contributions and Prospects released in April 2019 by the Office of the Leading Group for Promoting the Belt and Road Initiative.
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