china is using a subtle but effective tactic to exclude india from the global manufacturing sector, according to well-known influencer and chartered accountant vivek Khatri. Khatri claims that china is covertly redesigning the global supply chain while india is occupied with summits and policy documents.
 
This is the gradual occurrence of a form of industrial warfare. In this sense, china is three steps ahead of India.  As a geopolitical tool, china is making use of its trade surplus.  China is investing in other nations as part of the 'China Plus One' plan. But india is being purposefully left out.  China, according to Khatri, is denying india vital industrial inputs and attempting to obstruct India's ambitions to become a manufacturing force.  India still has a shot, though.  It may thwart China's intentions if it streamlines bureaucratic red tape, speeds up trade deals, creates industrial clusters, and fortifies its infrastructure, according to navbharattimes.indiatimes.com.
 
China is quietly changing global supply networks while india is occupied with conferences and policymaking.  All of this is taking place amicably and without any altercations.  According to Khatri, china is already three steps ahead in this industrial war that is developing slowly.

China's enormous trade surplus, according to Khatri, is a geopolitical weapon rather than merely a statistic. Businesses are expanding their supply networks across borders as part of the 'China Plus One' strategy. china is making investments in nations such as Vietnam, Mexico, Morocco, Indonesia, and Hungary. These nations are working together with China. china is not a rival of theirs. According to navbharattimes.indiatimes.com, they receive significant investments from china in exchange.
 
India, in Khatri's opinion, is purposefully excluded from this plan. He asserts that only india can achieve the same level of manufacturing advancement as China.  China recalls how it came to be in control.  It is unwilling to offer india that chance.  Even Apple, which is regarded as an indian electronics success story, is not doing as well as it should.  Only 15% of iPhones are produced in india, compared to the global goal of 25%. This is because of work inconsistencies, delays, and strikes.
 
 
 

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