The charm and logic of connectivity
Reconnecting Southasia to itself and the world", the Indian Foreign Secretary Shiv Shankar Menon often reminds us, is an important long-term political objective for New Delhi as a member of SAARC. But given the Subcontinent's reputation as the least-integrated region in the world, Menon's goal for India seems ambitious. As the region limps towards the implementation of a free-trade agreement, it has also begun to explore prospects for trans-border and trans-regional highways, rail lines and petroleum pipelines.
Yet the inability to make rapid progress on either free trade or deepening connectivity together points to the huge gulf between the proclaimed objectives on regionalism and the capacity of India and its surrounding neighbours to realise them. Part of the problem lies in the rather innocuous-sounding first word in Menon's phrase – reconnecting. Paradoxically, Southasia finds it hard to integrate and connect precisely because it was, until the middle of the last century, a single economic and cultural space. The Great Partition did not merely break up the political unity of the Subcontinent; it also divided its markets, laid waste its significant internal connectivities, and made it difficult for people and goods to move across the new borders. Connecting and integrating are clearly easier than re-connecting and re-integrating.