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India–Indonesia Relations: Importance, Cooperation & Challenges

  • Recently, Prime Minister Modi’s State Visit to Indonesia significantly strengthened the India–Indonesia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership across strategic and economic sectors.

    Key Outcomes

    • Defence Cooperation: BrahMos and Astra missile collaboration expanded; Indonesia deployed an ILO at IFC-IOR, Gurugram.
    • Health Security: Professional health workforce agreement signed; India will supply 100 tonnes of DWR-162 wheat seeds.
    • Digital Connectivity: Indonesia launched ION, based on India’s ONDC, empowering MSMEs through open digital commerce.
    • Cultural Diplomacy: ASI began Prambanan Temple restoration; Tagore–Dewantara Year (2026–27) announced for cultural exchanges.
    • Educational Partnership: IIM Bangalore will establish a branch campus at Singhasari SEZ, strengthening higher education cooperation.

Importance of Indonesia for India

  • Critical Minerals: Indonesia dominates the global critical minerals sector with roughly 21% of the world’s nickel reserves and ranks among the top global producers of copper, bauxite, and tin.
  • Maritime Security: Both countries have a shared Vision on Maritime Cooperation in the Indo-Pacific.
  • Huge Investments: Indian investment in Indonesia stood at USD 1.56 billion in 7292 projects during 2000- 2024.
  • Multilateral and Regional Engagements:  Trilateral mechanism India-Indonesia-Australia, BRICS, etc.
  • Strategic Convergences: Preventing and countering terrorism and violent extremism, freedom of navigation and global flow of commerce in the Strait of Hormuz, etc.

India–Indonesia Cooperation

  • Political Partnership: Elevated Comprehensive Strategic Partnership through 14 MoUs, regular summits and institutional dialogues during the 2026 State Visit.
  • Maritime Cooperation: Strengthened Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA), HADR, coastal surveillance, SAR operations and renewed Maritime Safety MoU.
  • Economic Integration: Bilateral trade exceeded US$28.15 billion (2024–25), with focus on AITIGA review, critical minerals and local currency trade.
  • Energy Partnership: Expanded collaboration in LNG, green hydrogen, bioenergy, solar energy and energy-efficient technologies for energy security.
  • Global Cooperation: Coordinated positions in BRICS, G20, ASEAN, IORA and the UN, supporting Indo-Pacific stability and Global South priorities.

Challenges in India–Indonesia Relations

  • Trade Potential: Bilateral trade exceeded US$28.15 billion (2024–25) but remains below potential, with persistent tariff and non-tariff barriers.
  • China Factor: China remains Indonesia’s largest trading partner and a major investor, limiting India’s strategic and economic space.
  • Connectivity Gaps: Despite proximity (Andaman–Aceh ~710 km), direct shipping and air connectivity remain limited, delaying regional integration.
  • Investment Barriers: India’s investment in Indonesia remains modest compared to East Asian economies due to regulatory and implementation challenges.
  • Maritime Challenges: The Strait of Malacca carries nearly one-fourth of global trade, underscoring the need for stronger India–Indonesia maritime coordination for regional security.

Way Forward

  • Trade Expansion: Conclude the AITIGA review and raise bilateral trade beyond the current US$28.15 billion (2024–25) through better market access.
  • Maritime Connectivity: Fast-track Sabang Port and Andaman–Aceh connectivity projects to strengthen Indo-Pacific logistics and regional integration.
  • Defence Manufacturing: Expand BrahMos, joint shipbuilding, MRO facilities and defence technology partnerships under Make in India.
  • Digital Integration: Operationalise cross-border QR payments, scale up ION–ONDC and strengthen AI, fintech and cybersecurity cooperation.
  • Cultural Exchanges: Implement the Tagore–Dewantara Year (2026–27), establish the IIM Bangalore campus and simplify visa norms to boost people-to-people ties.

“Geography makes neighbours; strategy makes partners. As maritime neighbours, India and Indonesia are shaping a resilient, secure and prosperous Indo-Pacific through deeper strategic cooperation and shared regional vision.

Reference: PIB

PMF IAS Pathfinder for Mains – Question 739

Q. Discuss the strategic significance of India-Indonesia relations in advancing India’s Indo-Pacific vision. Examine the key outcomes of the recent state visit and suggest measures to deepen the comprehensive strategic partnership. (250 Words) (15 Marks)

Approach

  • Introduction: Write a brief introduction about India-Indonesia’s relations.
  • Body: Write about the strategic significance of India-Indonesia relations, examine the key outcomes of the recent state visit and suggest measures to deepen the comprehensive strategic partnership.
  • Conclusion: Emphasis on maritime cooperation and comprehensive strategic partnership to promote a free, open, inclusive, and rules-based Indo-Pacific.

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