KEY POINTS
  • Except for India and the U.S., all other nations in IPEF are part of a rival bloc.
  • Although IPEF is not styled as a trade pact, trade is one of its four pillars.
  • India's aversion to a pact which includes China has geopolitical considerations at its root.
  • New Delhi's move comes as U.S. overtakes China to become India's largest trade partner in the fiscal year ending March 2022. 
U.S. President Joe Biden (R) here seen reviewing an honor guard with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in Tokyo, released an economic framework during his visit to Japan last week. The IPEF came as a lifeline for India, which had stayed out of a China-centric pact consisting of Southeast Asian nations in 2020.

Two years after walking out of a China-centric free trade pact in Southeast Asia, India is embracing the chance to become a founding member of another grouping — this one led by the U.S.

The launch of the U.S.-led Indo-Pacific Economic Framework in Tokyo during President Joe Biden's first official trip to Asia last week gives India a chance to make its own pivot to the Pacific.