Neighbourhood First Policy — Basic Structure
Basic Structure
India's Neighbourhood First Policy, launched in 2014, represents a comprehensive approach to regional diplomacy that prioritizes relations with immediate South Asian neighbours. The policy rests on five core pillars: enhanced connectivity through infrastructure projects, economic integration via trade and investment, strengthened people-to-people ties, security cooperation, and institutional dialogue mechanisms.
Key bilateral relationships include Bangladesh (Land Boundary Agreement, energy cooperation), Nepal (petroleum pipeline, hydropower projects), Sri Lanka (post-conflict reconstruction, port development), Bhutan (hydropower partnership, strategic alignment), Myanmar (Kaladan project, trilateral highway), Maldives (infrastructure development, maritime security), Afghanistan (development assistance, Chabahar port), and Pakistan (limited engagement due to terrorism concerns).
Major projects include the BBIN Motor Vehicle Agreement, Kaladan Multi-Modal Transit Transport Project, India-Myanmar-Thailand Trilateral Highway, and various digital connectivity initiatives. The policy faces challenges from China's Belt and Road Initiative competition, domestic political changes in neighbouring countries, cross-border terrorism, trade imbalances, and water disputes.
Success stories include improved India-Bangladesh relations, effective COVID-19 vaccine diplomacy, and enhanced regional connectivity. The policy represents India's evolution from reactive to proactive neighbourhood engagement, emphasizing mutual benefit over unilateral concessions.
Constitutional basis includes Articles 51 and 253, enabling international cooperation and treaty implementation. Recent developments include the India-Bangladesh Friendship Pipeline and comprehensive assistance to Sri Lanka during its economic crisis, demonstrating the policy's adaptability and crisis response capabilities.
Important Differences
vs Act East Policy
| Aspect | This Topic | Act East Policy |
|---|---|---|
| Geographic Focus | Immediate South Asian neighbours (SAARC countries) | Southeast Asia and East Asia (ASEAN Plus countries) |
| Strategic Rationale | Regional stability and security, countering Pakistan-China axis | Economic opportunities, balancing China's rise, maritime security |
| Implementation Approach | Bilateral focus with some multilateral initiatives (BBIN) | Multilateral engagement through ASEAN, EAS, ADMM-Plus |
| Economic Emphasis | Development assistance, connectivity, trade facilitation | Trade expansion, investment promotion, manufacturing partnerships |
| Security Dimension | Counter-terrorism, border management, traditional security | Maritime security, non-traditional security, military cooperation |
vs Gujral Doctrine
| Aspect | This Topic | Gujral Doctrine |
|---|---|---|
| Reciprocity Expectation | Mutual benefit and reciprocal cooperation | Non-reciprocal concessions to smaller neighbours |
| Scope of Engagement | Comprehensive (connectivity, economy, security, people-to-people) | Primarily political goodwill and confidence-building measures |
| Implementation Framework | Institutional mechanisms, regular summits, project-based approach | Ad-hoc diplomatic initiatives and unilateral gestures |
| Resource Commitment | Substantial financial commitments ($30+ billion in credit lines) | Limited resource allocation, mainly diplomatic initiatives |
| Strategic Context | Response to China's rise and BRI, proactive regional leadership | Post-Cold War confidence building, reactive to regional tensions |