ArticlePDF Available

India-Myanmar Border Trade

Authors:

Abstract and Figures

As India seeks to strengthen trade, investment and other forms of economic cooperation with ASEAN, Myanmar is an essential strategic partner, since it is the only ASEAN nation with which India shares both land and maritime borders. As a ‘gateway’ to South East Asia, Myanmar is also vital in terms of economic development for India’s North East Region (NER). India shares a 1643 km long border in four north-eastern states – Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur, and Mizoram - with Myanmar and this geographical proximity provides opportunity for the hitherto economically isolated northeast states of India to link to economic opportunities and markets in the east, building on their strong historical socio-cultural and economic linkages with Myanmar. To this end, India’s Act East Policy is increasingly being projected as the new economic development strategy for India's NER envisaging deeper economic integration of the region with South East Asia. Notwithstanding the advantages, for long, India-Myanmar border trade has been quite low primarily due to a restrictive border-trade policy framework wherein trade was permitted only in a limited number of locally produced items through barter. In December 2015 two important policy changes were introduced by India – shift from “Barter Trade to Normal Trade” and shift from “Border Trade to Normal Trade”. This study examines the effectiveness of the new trade policy measures adopted by India with regard to bilateral trade with Myanmar across the land border and highlights the challenges faced by traders in shifting to normal trade. The key finding of the study is that there has been a substantial increase in informal trade and formal bilateral trade between India and Myanmar has become almost negligible in the last two years. The report concludes with policy recommendations to address the impediments to formal trade across the land border with Myanmar and suggests measures that could facilitate the formalization of the rampant informal trade.
Content may be subject to copyright.
A preview of the PDF is not available
Article
Full-text available
Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, China Maldives, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka are the neighbouring countries of India. India's respective relations with its neighbouring nations are set apart by an intricate transaction of financial, security, and verifiable variables. India's geopolitical landscape with its neighbouring countries is not stable. In the context of the problem, that has been evident within the context of the geopolitical landscape in India and its neighbourhood countries, this study examines the complex dynamics of India's bilateral relations with neighbouring countries, examines broader geopolitics, insights including historical and contemporary aspects, and explores key events, alliances, conflicts and trade relations. In addition, asses all the facts, this study aims to provide strategic recommendations that can improve the India’s geopolitical landscape with its neighbours. The study aims to assess the geopolitical landscape between India and neighbouring countries. The study also aims to assess it provide strategic suggestions to improve the geopolitical landscape between India and neighbouring countries. A mixed method of qualitative and quantitative allows to take data to establish the findings of the study and provide recommendations.
Conference Paper
Full-text available
The Act East Policy (AEP) of India is being projected as the new economic development strategy for India's North Eastern Region (NER). Such a projection is based on the identified cardinal component of economic integration with South East Asia in terms of increased trade, investment, tourism and connectivity. In South East Asia, Thailand happens to be an important economy having significant interest to NER. This paper, through a SWOC analysis brings out a number of strengths and opportunities of the NER that can facilitate this economic integration. These include, continuum of cultural capital, abundant complementing and supplementing natural resources, low labor cost, young consumption society, strong community base to reduce information asymmetry, high opportunity for investment in agro processing, hydropower, petrochemicals, IT etc., geographical proximity to Bangladesh, Myanmar and China , upcoming India-Myanmar-Thailand trilateral highway, presence of world class educational institutions, FTA with Thailand and ASEAN and increase in labor cost in China. Some of the significant weaknesses and challenges to this envisaged economic integration on the NER side includes, high transactions costs because of relatively undefined property rights, sub-optimal intra-regional , interregional and inter country integration in terms of physical and digital connectivity, information asymmetry with respect to the people and economy of Thailand and institutional rigidities. From the Thai side, some of the manifested weaknesses and challenges are: low awareness about NER and sub-optimal connectivity with it. The paper concludes that there is adequate scope for economic integration between NER and Thailand under the AEP framework based on economic and cultural capital rationales.
Banking curbs stagnating trade with Myanmar: businesses. The Hindu Business Line
  • P Bose
Bose, P. (2018). Banking curbs stagnating trade with Myanmar: businesses. The Hindu Business Line. Available at https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/economy /policy/banking-curbs-stagnating-trade-with-myanmar-businesses/article9960551.ece
Act East: Enhancing India's trade with Bangladesh and Myanmar across border
  • Exim Bank
EXIM Bank. (2018). Act East: Enhancing India's trade with Bangladesh and Myanmar across border.
Government of India. Ministry of Commerce. Directorate General of Foreign Trade. Notification No. 9/95-Customs dated 6 th
  • B Gaens
  • O Ruohomäki
Gaens, B. and Ruohomäki,O. (2017). India's 'Look East' -'Act East' Policy. Available at https://storage.googleapis.com/upi-live/2017/10/bp222_indias-look-east--act-eastpolicy.pdf Government of India. Ministry of Commerce. Directorate General of Foreign Trade. Notification No. 9/95-Customs dated 6 th March 1995. Available at http://www.cbic.gov.in/htdocs-cbec/customs/cs-act/notifications/notfns-1999/cs-tarr1999/cs9-95
Ministry of Commerce. Directorate General of Foreign Trade
  • India Government Of
Government of India. Ministry of Commerce. Directorate General of Foreign Trade. Policy Circular No. 53(Re-99)/1997-2002 dated 29 th February 2000. Available at https://www.dgft.gov.in/sites/default/files/5_16.pdf
Ministry of Commerce. Directorate General of Foreign Trade. Public Notice No. 30 RE
  • India Government Of
Government of India. Ministry of Commerce. Directorate General of Foreign Trade. Public Notice No. 30 RE-2012/2009-2014 dated 7 th November 2008. Available at https://dgft.gov.in/sites/default/files/pn10608.pdf
Ministry of Commerce. Directorate General of Foreign Trade. Public Notice No. 30 RE-2012/2009-2014 dated 16 th
  • India Government Of
Government of India. Ministry of Commerce. Directorate General of Foreign Trade. Public Notice No. 30 RE-2012/2009-2014 dated 16 th November 2012. Available at https://dgft.gov.in/sites/default/files/pn3012_0.pdf
Market Access and India
  • Z Naing
  • K Nyein
Naing, Z. and Nyein, K. (2018). 'Market Access and India' in Taneja, S., Das, D. & Bimal, S. (2018). Sub Regional Cooperation between India in Myanmar and Bangladesh: Trade, Investment and Connectivity.