Diplomatist Magazine Diplomatist April-May 2019 | Page 55

LATIN AMERICA CORNER exports. The US, the principal market of Latin America has started reducing its oil imports after the game-changing shale revolution. On the other hand, India needs more and more oil to fuel its high economic growth. India’s domestic crude production has plateaued and imports have inevitably been increasing. There is thus a clear complementarity between India’s demand and Latin America’s supply. India has been importing two billion dollars worth soy oil and sunfl ower oil from South America. This helps India to reduce the overdependence on Indonesia and Malaysia, the monopoly suppliers who account for about 12 million tons out of India’s total imports of 15 million. The health- conscious Indians appreciate the South American soy and sunfl ower oil as better than the South East Asian palm oil which has more fat. In recent times, South America has started supplying pulses to India which imports about fi ve million tons a year from countries such as Myanmar, Canada and Australia. India is set on the course of increasing imports of vegetable oil and pulses in the long term due to the growing gap between domestic production and demand. Every year, India is losing hundreds of thousands of hectares of agricultural land to urbanisation and industrialisation. India faces serious water shortage and the water table in the main agricultural provinces including Punjab are going down due to indiscriminate and unsustainable pumping of groundwater for irrigation of water-intensive crops such as rice and sugarcane. At the same time, the Indian population increases every year by 15 million, equal to the population of Chile. The growing middle class wants to eat better food, going beyond the staple of basic cereals. On the other hand, South America has vast tracts of arable land and can bring in millions of hectares under cultivation. The region has abundant water reserves as well as technology and best practices. It has the potential to increase production to feed another 500 million more people. This surplus agricultural capacity is useful to India’s food security in the long term. Indian fi rms have invested over ten billion dollars in Latin America in sectors such as energy, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, auto parts and IT. The Indian IT, BPO and KPO fi rms employ around 30,000 young Latin Americans, who appreciate the opportunity to learn and upgrade their skills. Some of these have become entrepreneurs after gaining experience with the Indian tech fi rms. Latin American fi rms have invested about a billion dollars in India in areas such as soft drinks, multiplexes, theme parks and auto parts. Latin American software fi rms such as Globant from Argentina, Stefanini from Brazil and Softek from Mexico have established development and delivery centres in India employing over a thousand Indian software engineers. Latin America has even added value to Indian spiritual business. Several thousand Latin Americans practice and teach yoga, meditation and disseminate the teachings Indian Gurus. The Argentine Band Yoga Rave sings in pure Sanskrit in their shows performed sometimes in nightclubs. During their performance in the nightclubs, meat, alcohol, smoking and drugs are not allowed. Janderson Oliveira de Fernandes of Sao Paulo came to India for spiritual enlightenment. But he went beyond learning and became an authentic Guru himself anointed as “Sri Prem Baba”. He has ashrams in twelve countries around the world where he preaches Indian spiritualism with a Brazilian touch. In 2017-18, the Indo-Latin American trade was 34 billion dollars. India had exported 12 billion and imported 22 billion. The trade has the potential to reach 100 billion dollars by 2025. India and Latin America see the future not only through these numbers but as long-term win-win partners with mutual value addition and complementarities. The new paradigm of Indo- Latin America economic relations has added a real Bollywood touch too. Gustavo Santaolalla of Argentina has composed music for Aamir Khan’s fi lm Dhobi Ghat. Barbara Mori, a Mexican, acted as the heroine in the Indian Film Kites. There are quite a few Indian fi lms with acting by Latin Americans who blend naturally with their café con leche (coff ee with milk) complexion.  * Author is a Latin America expert and former Ambassador to Latin American countries Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Diplomatist • Vol 7 • Issue 4 • April-May 2019, Noida • 55