This MCQ module is based on: India-Japan, South Korea & Exercises
India-Japan, South Korea & Exercises
This assessment will be based on: India-Japan, South Korea & Exercises
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Japan, South Korea, India-Japan Relations & the Quad — Exercises
If the EU rebuilt itself by treaty, and China by reform, the third great Asian story is the rise of two countries that could so easily have been overlooked — Japan, the only nation in history to suffer atomic bombing, and South Korea, born in the rubble of a 1953 armistice. Both became "miracles". Both anchor today's Indo-Pacific. This concluding Part introduces them, places the rising centres of Latin America and Africa briefly into the picture, and then provides every NCERT exercise with model answers, a chapter Summary, and a Key Terms glossary.
2.16 Japan — A Pacifist Power
You may already know the famous Japanese brands — Sony, Panasonic, Canon, Suzuki, Honda, Toyota, Mazda. They have a worldwide reputation for high-technology products, precision manufacturing and reliable design. What is striking is that Japan has very few natural resources and imports most of its raw materials, including oil, gas, iron ore and food. Even so, Japan progressed rapidly after the end of the Second World War — emerging from atomic devastation in 1945 to become, by 2017, the third-largest economy in the world. It is the only Asian member of the Group of Seven (G-7), and the eleventh most populous nation in the world.
2.16.1 The Reconstruction of Japan (1945–60)
Japan's path to economic power began with reconstruction after the catastrophic loss of the Second World War. The country was occupied by American forces under General Douglas MacArthur from 1945 to 1952. During this period, Japan adopted a new democratic constitution in 1947, redistributed land from large landlords to small farmers, and rebuilt key industries with American support. The Korean War (1950–53) provided a powerful boost — Japan became the workshop and supply base for the United Nations forces fighting in Korea. By the late 1950s, Japan was producing more steel and electronics than at any time in its history.
2.16.2 Article 9 and the "Pacifist Constitution"
Japan is the only nation that suffered the destruction caused by nuclear bombs — at Hiroshima on 6 August 1945 and at Nagasaki on 9 August 1945. As a direct response, the post-war Japanese Constitution included a remarkable clause known as Article 9?: "the Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation and the threat or use of force as means of settling international disputes." Although Japan's military expenditure has been kept at only about 1% of its GDP, the absolute number is so large that it remains the seventh largest defence budget in the world. Japan has a security alliance with the United States since 1951, under which the US guarantees Japan's defence in exchange for forward basing rights.
2.16.3 The Asian Miracle and Japan in the World
Japan became a member of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in 1964 — the same year it hosted the Tokyo Olympics. Through the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, Japan grew at an extraordinary average of 8–10% a year, a phenomenon journalists called the "Japanese Miracle". Japanese cars, cameras, watches and consumer electronics swept world markets. Japan is the second-largest contributor to the regular budget of the United Nations, contributing almost 10% of the total.
Japan also has a long tradition of investment in robotics and high technology. ASIMO, the world's most advanced humanoid robot, developed by Honda, walks alongside human beings holding their hand. Even though growth has slowed since the 1990s, Japan remains the heart of one of the most advanced manufacturing systems on the planet.
2.16.4 India–Japan Relations
India and Japan signed their first peace treaty in 1952, when Japan was just emerging from US occupation. India waived war reparations and supported Japan's re-entry into the international community. Decades later, the relationship has matured into a genuine partnership.
- 2000: "Global Partnership in the Twenty-First Century" agreed during PM Yoshiro Mori's visit to India.
- 2006: Upgraded to "Global and Strategic Partnership".
- 2014: Upgraded further to "Special Strategic and Global Partnership" during PM Narendra Modi's visit to Tokyo.
- 2015: Civil Nuclear Cooperation Agreement signed — Japan's first such pact with a non-NPT signatory.
- Mumbai–Ahmedabad bullet train: Built using Japan's Shinkansen technology with a $17 billion soft loan from Japan.
- Quad partnership: Japan, India, the United States and Australia work together on Indo-Pacific security and supply-chain resilience.
2.17 South Korea — The Miracle on the Han River
The Korean peninsula was divided at the end of the Second World War along the 38th parallel — a Soviet-occupied North Korea (Democratic People's Republic of Korea) and a US-occupied South Korea (Republic of Korea). The Korean War of 1950–53, fought during the early Cold War, devastated both halves and intensified the rivalry between them. Both Koreas finally became Members of the United Nations only on 17 September 1991, four decades after the war ended.
2.17.1 The "Miracle on the Han River"
Meanwhile, between the 1960s and the 1980s, South Korea rapidly developed into an economic power — a transformation termed the "Miracle on the Han River"?, after the river that flows through the South Korean capital Seoul. South Korea joined the OECD in 1996. By 2017 its economy had become the eleventh largest in the world, and its military expenditure the tenth largest. According to the Human Development Report 2016, South Korea's HDI rank was 18 — placing it firmly among the world's most developed nations.
The major factors responsible for South Korea's rapid human development include "successful land reforms, rural development, extensive human-resources development and rapid equitable economic growth". Other factors include a sustained focus on exports, strong redistribution policies, public-infrastructure investment, and effective institutions and governance.
2.17.2 The Korean Wave Comes to India
The South Korean brands Samsung, LG and Hyundai are now household names in India. Samsung mobile phones and televisions, LG washing machines and refrigerators, and Hyundai cars from the i10 to the Creta have shaped Indian middle-class consumption since the 1990s. South Korea is also a leading source of foreign direct investment into India's manufacturing sector. More recently, the rise of K-pop, K-drama and K-beauty has produced a striking cultural Korean Wave (Hallyu) in India among urban youth.
2.18 Other Emerging Centres — Latin America and Africa
The story of alternative centres of power is not limited to Europe and East Asia. Two other regions are increasingly mentioned in the same conversation, even though their rise has been more uneven.
2.19 Implications for India — A Multi-Aligned Foreign Policy
What is the message of this chapter for the practice of Indian foreign policy? In a world of multiple alternative centres of power, India cannot afford to put all its eggs in one basket. The official Indian language for this is "strategic autonomy" or, in newer phrasing, "multi-alignment" — building partnerships with the EU, ASEAN, China (despite friction), Japan, South Korea, the United States, Russia and others, without becoming dependent on any one of them.
| Centre | Indian flagship | Strategic objective |
|---|---|---|
| European Union | India–EU Trade and Technology Council; FTA negotiations | Technology, climate, market access |
| ASEAN-10 | Act East Policy; ASEAN–India FTA (2010) | Northeast India connectivity, maritime trade, balancing China |
| China | BRICS, SCO, bilateral border-management mechanisms | Manage rivalry while preserving trade interdependence |
| Japan | Special Strategic and Global Partnership; Quad | Infrastructure, technology, Indo-Pacific security |
| South Korea | Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (2010) | Manufacturing, electronics, automotive investment |
| Latin America & Africa | India-Africa Forum Summits; BRICS Brazil–South Africa pillar | South–South cooperation, voice of the developing world |
This chapter has discussed Europe, ASEAN, China, Japan and South Korea as alternative centres of power. But India is the fifth-largest economy in the world (overtaking Britain in 2022 and France in 2023), the most populous country, and a nuclear-armed democracy. Should the next edition of the textbook add India to this list?
- List 4 reasons India qualifies as a contemporary centre of power.
- List 3 reasons India still has work to do before it does.
- Argue, in 100 words, your own view.
2.20 NCERT Exercises — Full Solutions
Exercise 1 — Chronological order
Q1. Arrange the following in chronological order: (a) China's accession to WTO, (b) Establishment of the EEC, (c) Establishment of the EU, (d) Birth of ARF.
So the chronological order is: (b) → (c) → (d) → (a).
Exercise 2 — The "ASEAN Way"
Q2. The "ASEAN Way" — (a) Reflects the lifestyle of ASEAN members; (b) A form of interaction among ASEAN members that is informal and cooperative; (c) The defence policy followed by ASEAN members; (d) The road that connects all the ASEAN members.
Exercise 3 — "Open Door" policy
Q3. Which of the following nations adopted an "open door" policy? (a) China; (b) South Korea; (c) Japan; (d) USA.
Exercise 4 — Fill in the blanks
Q4. Fill in the blanks:
(a) The border conflict between China and India in 1962 was principally over ______ and ______ region.
(b) ARF was established in the year ______.
(c) China entered into bilateral relations with ______ (a major country) in 1972.
(d) ______ Plan influenced the establishment of the Organisation for European Economic Cooperation in 1948.
(e) ______ is the organisation of ASEAN that deals with security.
(a) Arunachal Pradesh and Aksai Chin (the Ladakh region).
(b) ARF was established in 1994.
(c) China entered into bilateral relations with the United States of America in 1972.
(d) The Marshall Plan influenced the establishment of the OEEC in 1948.
(e) The ASEAN Security Community (operationalised through the ASEAN Regional Forum, ARF) is the ASEAN body that deals with security.
Exercise 5 — Objectives of regional organisations
Q5. What are the objectives of establishing regional organisations?
- To accelerate economic growth and trade: by lowering tariffs, sharing markets and pooling investment, as ASEAN does through its Economic Community and the EU does through its single market.
- To promote peace and stability: by giving disputes a place where they can be settled through dialogue rather than war, as the ASEAN Regional Forum and the Council of Europe do.
- To resist great-power pressure: by giving small and medium states collective weight, as Southeast Asia did during the Cold War and the EU does today.
- To pool sovereignty for joint problems: climate change, pandemics, terrorism, narcotics and migration cannot be solved by any one state alone.
- To promote a regional identity: through education, culture, sport and people-to-people contact, as the ASEAN Socio-Cultural Community is doing.
Exercise 6 — Geographical proximity and regional organisations
Q6. How does geographical proximity influence the formation of regional organisations?
Exercise 7 — ASEAN Vision 2020
Q7. What are the components of the ASEAN Vision 2020?
- Regional outward orientation: ASEAN was to act not as a closed club but as an active and confident actor in international politics.
- Encouragement of negotiation over conflicts: ASEAN built on its earlier success in mediating the end of the Cambodian conflict and the East Timor crisis, and committed itself to dialogue rather than coercion.
- Annual East Asian dialogue: Vision 2020 institutionalised regular meetings to discuss East Asian cooperation, leading to ASEAN+3 (with Japan, China and South Korea) and the wider East Asia Summit.
- Foundation for the ASEAN Community (2003): Vision 2020 set the stage for the three-pillar ASEAN Community — Security, Economic and Socio-Cultural — which was formally established in 2003 and operationalised by 2015.
- Free Trade Area (FTA): A long-term goal of free movement of investment, labour and services within ASEAN.
Exercise 8 — Pillars and objectives of the ASEAN Community
Q8. Name the pillars and the objectives of the ASEAN Community.
- ASEAN Security Community: objective — to ensure that outstanding territorial disputes do not escalate into armed confrontation. By 2003, members had signed several agreements promising to uphold peace, neutrality, cooperation, non-interference and respect for national differences and sovereign rights. The ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF, 1994) is its operational arm.
- ASEAN Economic Community: objective — to create a common market and production base within ASEAN states and to aid social and economic development across the region. It also seeks to improve the existing ASEAN Dispute Settlement Mechanism for resolving economic disputes and to create a Free Trade Area for investment, labour and services.
- ASEAN Socio-Cultural Community: objective — to build a regional identity through education, public health, environment, gender, youth and cultural cooperation, recognising that economic integration alone cannot produce a sense of belonging.
Exercise 9 — Present Chinese economy vs. command economy
Q9. In what ways does the present Chinese economy differ from its command economy?
- Ownership: the older economy was almost entirely state-owned and modelled on the Soviet command system; the present economy is "socialism with Chinese characteristics" — a market economy with strong state guidance, in which a thriving private sector coexists with strategic state-owned enterprises.
- Openness to the world: the older economy was closed (import-substituting); the present economy is open through Special Economic Zones (Shenzhen, Zhuhai), foreign direct investment, and accession to the WTO in 2001.
- Agriculture: Mao-era collective farms were replaced after 1982 by the Household Responsibility System; farmers now keep their surplus, raising rural incomes dramatically.
- Industry: the older economy emphasised state-owned heavy industry; from 1998 onwards, industries were progressively privatised, and rural industry expanded rapidly.
- Growth rate: the older economy grew at 5–6% (most of which was eaten up by population growth); the reformed economy averaged 9–10% from 1980 to around 2010, lifting hundreds of millions out of poverty and building reserves that fund big investments abroad.
Exercise 10 — Resolving Europe's post-war problem
Q10. How did the European countries resolve their post-Second World War problem? Briefly outline the attempts that led to the formation of the European Union.
- 1948 — Marshall Plan and OEEC: the United States transferred more than $13 billion of aid to revive Western Europe, channelled through the Organisation for European Economic Cooperation (OEEC), which became a forum for cooperation on trade and economic policy.
- 1949 — NATO and the Council of Europe: NATO provided collective security against the Soviet bloc; the Council of Europe became the first political-cooperation institution focused on human rights and the rule of law.
- 1951 — Treaty of Paris: France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg created the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) — pooling the war industries.
- 1957 — Treaties of Rome: the same six states created the European Economic Community (EEC) and Euratom — a common market with free movement of goods, services, capital and labour.
- 1979 — European Parliament: first direct elections gave European integration a democratic foundation.
- 1985 — Schengen Agreement: internal border controls were abolished among signatories.
- 1992 — Treaty of Maastricht: created the European Union, laid the foundations for a common foreign and security policy, cooperation on justice and home affairs, and the single currency.
- 2002 — Euro: launched as cash currency in 12 member states.
- 2004 / 2007 / 2013 — Eastern enlargement: 13 new members joined, bringing the EU to 28 states (until Brexit in 2020).
Exercise 11 — Why the EU is highly influential
Q11. What makes the European Union a highly influential regional organisation?
- Economic influence: Combined GDP of about $19.35 trillion in 2024 — close to that of the US. The euro is the second most traded currency and challenges the US dollar. The EU's share of world trade is far larger than that of the US, allowing the EU to be assertive in trade disputes inside the WTO.
- Political and diplomatic influence: France holds a permanent seat on the UN Security Council. Several other EU members regularly serve as non-permanent UNSC members. The EU has used this leverage on issues ranging from Iran's nuclear programme to dialogues with China on human rights and the environment, preferring diplomacy and economic investment to coercion.
- Military influence: Combined armed forces of EU members are the second largest in the world, defence spending second only to the US, France has approximately 335 nuclear warheads, and the EU is the world's second most important source of space and communications technology.
- Supranational reach: As a supranational organisation, the EU can intervene simultaneously in economic, political and social matters. It has its own flag, anthem, founding date and currency — the EU functions in many areas as a "near-state".
Exercise 12 — China and India challenging the unipolar world
Q12. The emerging economies of China and India have great potential to challenge the unipolar world. Do you agree with the statement? Substantiate your arguments.
Arguments for agreement:
- China is already projected to overtake the United States as the world's largest economy by 2040; India is the fastest-growing major economy and has overtaken Britain and France in nominal GDP. Together, the two will house roughly one-third of humankind and a quarter of the world's economy by mid-century.
- Both possess nuclear weapons, large armed forces, growing space programmes and rapidly modernising digital sectors.
- Both are members of BRICS, the SCO, the G-20 and the AIIB — platforms that already provide partial alternatives to the US-led Bretton Woods system.
- India's 1998 nuclear tests, justified on the grounds of a threat from China, did not stop the further expansion of bilateral interaction; trade rose from $338 million in 1992 to over $84 billion in 2017. This shows that economic interdependence between the two is now structural.
- Both countries have adopted similar positions inside the WTO, and on issues like climate justice, IMF reform and the global digital order — areas where they can together resist a unipolar agenda.
Caveats:
- The unresolved border (Arunachal Pradesh, Aksai Chin, Galwan), CPEC concerns and Chinese support for Pakistan complicate the relationship.
- India and China also compete for regional influence in South Asia, the Indian Ocean and Africa.
Exercise 13 — Peace and prosperity through regional organisations
Q13. The peace and prosperity of countries lay in the establishment and strengthening of regional economic organisations. Justify this statement.
- Europe: after two world wars, France, Germany and their neighbours pooled coal and steel (ECSC, 1951), then markets (EEC, 1957), then sovereignty (EU, 1992) and currency (euro, 2002). The result is more than seventy years of peace among states that fought each other relentlessly for centuries — recognised by the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize awarded to the EU.
- Southeast Asia: the ASEAN Way and the Bangkok Declaration (1967) turned an arc of countries weakened by colonialism and the Cold War into one of the fastest-growing regions of the world, mediating the Cambodian conflict and the East Timor crisis.
- Economic gains: regional FTAs (ASEAN-India FTA 2010, EU single market) raise growth, lower prices for consumers and create jobs. ASEAN's integration with the global economy attracts FDI and helped stabilise its members after the 1997 financial crisis.
- Pooled sovereignty for shared problems: climate change, pandemics, terrorism, drug trafficking and refugee flows cannot be solved by any state alone. Regional organisations are the natural forum for joint action.
- Voice on the world stage: small and medium states gain disproportionate influence by speaking together — the EU at the WTO, ASEAN at the East Asia Summit.
Exercise 14 — Contentious issues between China and India
Q14. Identify the contentious issues between China and India. How could these be resolved for greater cooperation? Give your suggestions.
Contentious issues:
- The unresolved border: the 1962 war was fought principally over Arunachal Pradesh in the eastern sector and Aksai Chin in the Ladakh sector; the Galwan clash of June 2020 again exposed how risky the Line of Actual Control remains.
- Tibet: India hosts the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan government in exile; China sees this as interference.
- China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC): passes through Pakistan-occupied territory claimed by India.
- Counter-terrorism: Chinese holds at the UN on India's moves against Pakistan-based terrorists.
- Trade asymmetry: a persistent trade deficit; Chinese manufactured goods dominate Indian markets.
- Strategic competition in the Indo-Pacific: Chinese activities in the Indian Ocean (port investments in Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Maldives) and India's Quad partnership produce mutual suspicion.
- UNSC reform: China has been reluctant to support India's permanent membership.
Suggestions for resolution:
- Continue boundary negotiations at the level of Special Representatives without preconditions; build credible deterrence on the LAC so that talks proceed from a position of mutual respect.
- Rebuild military-to-military confidence-building measures — hotlines, regular meetings, joint drills against common threats such as piracy.
- Diversify trade — India's plan for production-linked incentives and pharma-API self-reliance is the right response to trade asymmetry.
- Use multilateral platforms (BRICS, SCO, G-20) to find common ground on climate change, IMF reform and the digital order — issues where India and China genuinely agree.
- Expand people-to-people contact through education, tourism and cultural exchanges, which had thinned out after 2020.
- Engage on a "code of conduct" for the Indo-Pacific that respects freedom of navigation and rules-based order.
Competency-Based Questions — Part 3
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.
📘 Chapter 2 Summary — Contemporary Centres of Power
- The end of bipolarity in 1991 raised the question: who could limit US dominance? The answer: alternative centres of power — the EU, ASEAN, China, Japan, South Korea, and rising blocs in Latin America and Africa.
- European Union (EU) grew from the Marshall Plan (1948) and OEEC, through the Treaty of Paris (1951), the Treaty of Rome (1957), the European Parliament (1979), the Schengen Agreement (1985), and finally the Treaty of Maastricht (1992). The euro was launched in 2002. After Brexit (2020), the EU has 27 members and a combined GDP of roughly $19.35 trillion.
- EU power rests on four pillars: economic, political-diplomatic, military, and supranational. France's UNSC seat and ~335 nuclear warheads anchor the EU diplomatically and militarily. Limits include Euro-skepticism, the failed 2003 Constitution, and Brexit.
- ASEAN was founded by the Bangkok Declaration of 1967 with 5 members and now has 10. Its trademark style — the "ASEAN Way" — is informal, non-confrontational and consensus-based. The ASEAN Community (2003) has three pillars — Security, Economic, Socio-Cultural. ASEAN+3 brings in Japan, China and South Korea.
- India's Look East Policy (1992) was upgraded to "Act East" (2014); India is a Strategic Partner of ASEAN and signed an ASEAN-India FTA in 2010.
- China's rise began with Deng Xiaoping's Open Door Policy (1978). Step-by-step reforms — agriculture privatised in 1982, industry in 1998, WTO in 2001 — produced 9–10% growth from 1980 to around 2010 and made China the world's second-largest economy. Costs include unemployment (~100 million), environmental degradation, and rural-urban inequality.
- India–China relations have moved from "Hindi-Chini bhai-bhai" through the 1962 war (Arunachal Pradesh, Aksai Chin), a freeze until 1976, Rajiv Gandhi's 1988 visit, fast-growing trade, the 2018 Wuhan summit, and recent friction (Galwan 2020, CPEC, counter-terrorism holds).
- Japan rose from atomic devastation to become the world's third-largest economy by 2017, the only Asian member of the G-7. Article 9 of its Constitution renounces war as a sovereign right; defence spending is only 1% of GDP yet ranks seventh in the world. India and Japan upgraded their ties to a "Special Strategic and Global Partnership" in 2014.
- South Korea's "Miracle on the Han River" made it the world's eleventh-largest economy by 2017, an OECD member since 1996, with HDI rank 18 in 2016. Brands like Samsung, LG and Hyundai are now household names in India.
- Other emerging centres include Brazil, Mexico, Argentina (Latin America); the African Union, AfCFTA, South Africa, Nigeria (Africa). India engages with all of them through forums like BRICS, the India-Africa Forum Summit and ITEC.
- Implication for India: a multi-aligned, multi-partner foreign policy — strategic autonomy in a multipolar world.
Key Terms
Frequently Asked Questions
How did Japan become an economic giant after World War II?
Japan rose through the US security umbrella under the 1951 Mutual Security Treaty (allowing low defence spending), heavy investment in human capital and education, export-oriented manufacturing, consensus-based corporate culture, high savings and investment rates, and quality engineering. It became the world's second-largest economy by the 1970s.
Why is South Korea called an "Asian Tiger"?
South Korea is one of the four Asian Tigers (with Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong) — economies that grew rapidly from the 1960s to 1990s through state-led, export-oriented industrialisation. South Korea also democratised in 1987 and now leads in electronics, automobiles and shipbuilding.
What is the India-Japan strategic partnership?
India and Japan upgraded their relationship to a Special Strategic and Global Partnership in 2014. Cooperation includes the Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train, the 2017 civil nuclear cooperation agreement, defence ties, Indo-Pacific coordination through the Quad, and major Japanese investment in Indian infrastructure.
What is the Quad and what does it do?
The Quad (Quadrilateral Security Dialogue) brings together India, Japan, the USA and Australia. It focuses on a free and open Indo-Pacific, maritime security, supply-chain resilience, vaccines, climate and emerging technologies. The first Quad Leaders' Summit was held in March 2021.
What caused the 1962 India-China war?
The 1962 war was triggered by border disputes inherited from colonial times — especially the McMahon Line in the east and Aksai Chin in the west — exacerbated by India's grant of asylum to the Dalai Lama in 1959 and the discovery of a Chinese road across Aksai Chin. China defeated India militarily and unilaterally announced a ceasefire.
What is the Line of Actual Control (LAC)?
The Line of Actual Control (LAC) is the de facto border between India and China since 1962. It is not formally demarcated, leading to periodic clashes — notably Doklam (2017) and the Galwan Valley clash of June 2020 in which 20 Indian soldiers were killed.
How does India balance ties with Japan and China?
India deepens its strategic partnership with Japan (Quad, infrastructure, defence) while still engaging China economically and managing the LAC dispute diplomatically. India preserves strategic autonomy — cooperating with both as appropriate, without joining a US-led military alliance against China.