Trucking magnate Lindsay Fox looks at India’s booming economy and population of 1.2 billion people and sees great potential to create jobs and prosperity for Australia.

Warm relations! Picture: AFP

“That’s a hell of a lot of tomatoes, bananas, cows, sheep or anything that we can produce in Australia,” he says enthusiastically. Yet apart from Fox and a handful of other business leaders, India has not seemed a top priority for Australia.

The focus has been on the other giant economy in the region - China - and a national obsession to strike deals and sell iron ore. And despite historical links and a shared passion for sport, particularly cricket, India has been in the too hard basket.

Political relations have been strained by two big issues - Labor’s refusal to sell uranium to India because the nuclear-armed nation has not signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and a belief across the sub-continent that Indian students here were under siege from racist attacks.

This week Fox has been leading a trade delegation to coincide with a state visit by Prime Minister Julia Gillard. And the message from India’s political and business elite is those problems have been fixed and now deals can be made.

As India drags itself out of poverty, the rise of middle class and new disposable spending power will unleash opportunities in goods and services, particularly where the average age is a youthful 26 years.

As Fox puts it, there will be 100 million new people every year with money ready to buy things - five times Australia’s population. “We’re in the right spot at the right time and we’ve all got to be smart enough to capitalise on it,” he says.

Gillard will soon unveil a White Paper on Australia in the Asian Century - a blueprint for the nation’s strategic and economic engagement with the region.

While there will rightly be a focus on relations with our biggest customer and superpower China,  our vital neighbour Indonesia, tradional trading partners Japan and South Korea and closest ally the United States, India will be added to this group which Gillard says are the the six countries that “matter most to Australia”.

The bonds of history are no longer enough to keep Britain at the top any more. The future is the Asian Century.

While the PM’s stumble and fall when her shoe heel became stuck in wet grass might have grabbed the biggest headlines at home, her visit has been vital for Australia.

It’s a clear message that the relationship is not just about cricket, or as one Indian leader said, it has to move beyond “the 3Cs of commerce, curry and coal”.

Gillard gives Kevin Rudd credit for laying the groundwork in a visit to India in 2009 but his decision to maintain Labor’s ban on uranium sales was a roadblock.

Labor’s emotional national conference decision last year to remove the ban in a debate where Right-wing hardman Stephen Conroy cried and voted against the PM, has been the turning point.

Fox says there was “no question” the ban hurt relations. Gillard said it was an “obstacle” and that was why she forced the change.

Not a single ounce of yellow cake has been sold but ANZ boss Mike Smith, who is also part of the delegation, says there is already a “can do” spirit of goodwill.

Gillard insists Australia will negotiate nuclear safeguards and wants the International Atomic Energy Agency to have a watchdog role. But anti-nuclear groups accuse Gillard of trying to buy prosperity by putting the world at risk and say India has shot dead two protestors and safety standards are poor.

GILLARD’S trip has been a charm offensive that has included awarding Indian batsman Sachin Tendulkar an Order of Australia medal.

Yet the PM was keen to show there’s more to Australia than the spin of Shane Warne or the singing and Bollywood acting of Brett Lee and she launched a four-month festival of Australian culture with 100 events in 18 Indian cities.

Gillard herself has become a celebrity of sorts in India. Her fall on her face was praised in sections of the Indian media for her ability to bounce back immediately while her speech in Parliament attacking Tony Abbott as sexist has be frequently raised with her.

As one Indian women told a youth forum: “Women like me are getting inspired by you…the way you spoke in the Parliament.”

But while Indians are the fastest growing group of new migrants settling in Australia, with the most number of skilled immigrants and second highest number of foreign students and Hindi Australia’s fastest growing language, formal links have been too weak until now.

And it shows how poor relations were that when the Indian media exaggerated the racist attacks on students, the Indian public were so willing to believe the worst of Australia. That’s in part our fault.

While Australia’s focus has been on communist China, it has seemed strange there has not been the same passion and determination until now about India, who like Australia is a democracy with similar institutions. Gillard also wants to beef up military ties and she was the one who pointed out that Australia currently has stronger defence ties with China than India.

Gillard’s trip has been successful but an Indian PM hasn’t visited Australia for 26 years. Gillard’s counterpart Manmohan Singh says he would love to come, but no dates are set. The 80-year-old pulled out of CHOGM in Perth 12 months ago.

A visit really would show a significant shift in relations.

A decade ago two-way trade was a rather limp $3 billion. It’s now $20 billion and the Government has the ambitious target of reaching $40 billion by 2015. That’s a hell of a lot of tomatoes and bananas.

Comments on this post will close at 8pm AEST.

Most commented

25 comments

Show oldest | newest first

    • Last Days of the Raj says:

      04:57am | 19/10/12

      “Four-month festival of Australian culture?” - I doubt you could fill four minutes.

      “The bonds of history are no longer enough to keep Britain at the top any more. The future is the Asian Century.” -  Well boo and indeed hoo! As with everything, Oz is lagging a few years behind the Brits on this one. http://www.economist.com/blogs/schumpeter/2010/07/britain_and_india

    • Nathan says:

      07:23am | 19/10/12

      Comments like this make me think you should live else where making comments regarding Australia’s lack of culture. FYI the first art works known to man are found in Australia.

      Look at the Indian populations and the historical links of course the UK is ahead there. Plenty of things they are way behind on. What else is Australia lagging behind Britain on exactly?

    • expat says:

      02:59pm | 19/10/12

      Have to agree on the lack of culture.. Culture is not just a collection of art in a gallery.

    • acotrel says:

      05:51am | 19/10/12

      There are parts of America where most people carry guns and are very polite towards each other.  I wonder how we should behave towards Indians and Pakistanis who are armed with H-bombs ?

    • nihonin says:

      07:07am | 19/10/12

      Using the comments as a guide, concerning Islamists, I’d say you, acotrel would do pretty much the same with the Indians & Pakistani’s.

    • say what? says:

      09:53am | 19/10/12

      Hardly fair to put Indians and Pakistanis in the same basket.

    • pete says:

      07:04am | 19/10/12

      How do I make friends with the Indian guy downstairs who comes home at 2am and starts screaming with his wife?

      How do I make friends with the Indian doctor upstairs who one night used his wife as a javelin? Ringing the cops and having him carted away is as friendly as I get.

      Do we really want to be sending them uranium? They appear almost as violent and angry sober as Australians are when they’re on the turps.

    • DJ says:

      09:13am | 19/10/12

      there are 999,999,998 that you could try to make friends with

    • chuck says:

      07:07am | 19/10/12

      “But while Indians are the fastest growing group of new migrants settling in Australia, with the most number of skilled immigrants and second highest number of foreign students and Hindi Australia’s fastest growing language, formal links have been too weak until now.”

      And I wonder why that is the case? If Lindsay got out of his air conditioned truck he might soon realise that India is not all that that it is cracked up (by this article) to be. Just ask any businessman who has had dealings with Indians.

    • marley says:

      07:56am | 19/10/12

      “he might soon realise that India is not all that that it is cracked up (by this article) to be.”

      Neither is China, but we’ve been cozying up to them for decades.  India is a massive potential market, it’s a major source of migrants and it’s a useful strategic balance against Chinese ambitions in Asia.  Sure, it has issues with corruption, poverty, ethnic rivalries and over-weaning bureaucracy (again, not unlike China) - but it is a democracy, it is a growing power, and it is not going to go away. 

      It makes absolute sense to strengthen our relations with the “other” Asian giant.

    • Mayday says:

      07:09am | 19/10/12

      Business should beware.  Still waiting payment on the Delhi Commonwealth Games….....http://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/opinion/indian-givers-slammed-for-not-paying-the-delhi-games-bills/story-e6frg9of-1226498881077

    • Rosie says:

      07:10am | 19/10/12

      Good for you Julia, right move when Abbott becomes our next PM.

      Gillard’s counterpart PM Manmohan Singh must have been thinking when he looked at his watch just before Gillard spoke; “OK I know what you want me to hear and that is your Labor Govt will unblock the ban the previous Labor Govt blocked on exporting your uranium to my country.”

      I was waiting for Gillard to say what she said when the Opposition Leader looked at his watch before she finished her attack on him with her tirade! For all our sakes, thank goodness she didn’t!

    • maria says:

      07:40am | 19/10/12

      That’s a hell of a lot of people 2 000 000 australian people struggling to make ends meet. Let’s start fixing our own problems first and protect our borders, values and traditions.

      .....Australia is a democracy ?????
      under the absolute power of the mob after each election.
      This is not a democracy but a mafiacracy.

      Where the bloody hell are our democratic rights after each election?

      Direct democracy a la Switzerland in which only the people are sovereign is democracy anything else is a lie and a fraud.

    • marley says:

      08:24am | 19/10/12

      I’d love to see you apply your direct democracy model to India. The mind boggles.

    • James says:

      07:51am | 19/10/12

      As long as friends don’t have to live in my house I am fine with being friends.

    • Chopper knows says:

      09:01am | 19/10/12

      Sharing is caring

    • Sam says:

      07:53am | 19/10/12

      The PM wins a seat at the UN, Visits our wonderful troops in Afghanistan then over to India to improve relations and create business ties. Tony Abbott think the only foreign issue is STOP DA BOATS. Lift your game Tony

    • AdamC says:

      08:14am | 19/10/12

      Almost half of all Indian children are stunted through a lack of adequate nutrition. The equivalent figure for China is something like 5%.

      India’s economic success needs to be kept in perspective.

      There is quite a good article in the Aus today that argues India needs to focus on roductivity and efficiency, rather than simply using state firms to marshal resources to create growth, any growth. Seems reasonable to me.

      On the other hand, props to JuLiar for going over there and resurrecting a bilateral relationship trashed by ‘no uranium for you’, Beijing lobby Kevin Rudd.

    • Tim the Toolman says:

      08:39am | 19/10/12

      “trashed by ‘no uranium for you’”

      I suppose if you have a particular dislike for Pakistan, it could be construed as an excellent idea.  Also makes sense to be friendly, so they’re not interested in returning the uranium to us at high speed, slightly enriched.

    • marley says:

      09:37am | 19/10/12

      Well, if I had to choose between India and Pakistan, I think I know which side I’d be on.

    • Stan says:

      10:23am | 19/10/12

      @marley
      really?

    • marley says:

      11:42am | 19/10/12

      @Stan - they both have their problems, but India is at least trying to address them.  Pakistan, not so much.

    • Mike says:

      10:15am | 19/10/12

      Wow, the comments here are embarrassing (because of their arrogance and ignorance)
      2 Questions:
      Is India a bigger threat than China? (we sell them uranium)
      Is India’s fear of Pakistan understandable? (would you want a muslim military dictatorship that recently accomodated Osama Bin Laden on your doorstep?)

    • Kiddo says:

      11:21am | 19/10/12

      @Mike - don’t be too surprised by either the arrogance or ignorance. Like a lot of first world countries, australians are largely ignorant when it comes to peoples and places outside thier own. We have a lot of ignorance about our immediate neighbours, let alone a country like india which is viewed through the prisms of slumdog millionaire, the loudness of bollywood and the antics of the cricket team.

    • AshToClash says:

      12:18pm | 19/10/12

      @Kiddo-hear hear! Most Australians knowledge of foreign relations or matters extends to New South Welshians going to Queensland for their yearly holdiay. We will resist learning about ANYTHIING new till outr dying breaths!

 

Facebook Recommendations

Read all about it

Punch live

Up to the minute Twitter chatter

Daniel Piotrowski

RT @ToryShepherd: Onya, @KRuddMP“@newscomauHQ: BREAKING: Kevin Rudd has come out in support of same sex marriage: http://t.co/CFaHrxyV5G

Daniel Piotrowski

RT @newscomauHQ: BREAKING: Kevin Rudd has come out in support of same sex marriage: http://t.co/2KEO6yEx5F

Daniel Piotrowski

True Rudd style. Bazillion word folksy statement

Daniel Piotrowski

RT @Rob_Stott: Like a lot of Republicans in the US, it's much easier to support gay marriage when you're no longer in a position to do anyt…

Recent posts

The latest and greatest

The Punch is moving house

The Punch is moving house

Good morning Punchers. After four years of excellent fun and great conversation, this is the final post…

Will Pope Francis have the vision to tackle this?

Will Pope Francis have the vision to tackle this?

I have had some close calls, one that involved what looked to me like an AK47 pointed my way, followed…

Advocating risk management is not “victim blaming”

Advocating risk management is not “victim blaming”

In a world in which there are still people who subscribe to the vile notion that certain victims of sexual…

Nosebleed Section

choice ringside rantings

From: Hasbro, go straight to gaol, do not pass go

Tim says:

They should update other things in the game too. Instead of a get out of jail free card, they should have a Dodgy Lawyer card that not only gets you out of jail straight away but also gives you a fat payout in compensation for daring to arrest you in the first place. Instead of getting a hotel when you… [read more]

From: A guide to summer festivals especially if you wouldn’t go

Kel says:

If you want a festival for older people or for families alike, get amongst the respectable punters at Bluesfest. A truly amazing festival experience to be had of ALL AGES. And all the young "festivalgoers" usually write themselves off on the first night, only to never hear from them again the rest of… [read more]

Gentle jabs to the ribs

Superman needs saving

Superman needs saving

Can somebody please save Superman? He seems to be going through a bit of a crisis. Eighteen months ago,… Read more

28 comments

Newsletter

Read all about it

Sign up to the free News.com.au newsletter