Act East Policy — Basic Structure
Basic Structure
The Act East Policy, launched in 2014, is India's comprehensive strategy for engaging with Southeast Asia, East Asia, and the broader Indo-Pacific region. It evolved from the Look East Policy (1991) but represents a significant upgrade in scope and ambition.
The policy is built on four pillars: political engagement through regional forums and summit diplomacy; strategic partnerships including defense cooperation and maritime security; economic integration via trade agreements and connectivity projects; and cultural connectivity through people-to-people exchanges.
ASEAN centrality is the core principle, with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations serving as the primary anchor for India's regional engagement. Key achievements include the India-ASEAN Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, bilateral strategic partnerships with Japan, Australia, South Korea, and Vietnam, and participation in regional mechanisms like the East Asia Summit and Quad partnership.
Major connectivity projects include the India-Myanmar-Thailand Trilateral Highway and Kaladan Multi-Modal Transit Transport Project. The policy addresses China's growing influence through competitive cooperation, offering alternative models of engagement based on democratic values and rule-based order.
Challenges include infrastructure delays, trade imbalances, geopolitical tensions, and resource constraints. The policy's success is measured through increased trade (India-ASEAN trade reached $87.96 billion in 2021-22), enhanced strategic partnerships, and India's growing role in regional architecture.
Recent developments include participation in the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework and elevation of India-ASEAN ties to Comprehensive Strategic Partnership level in 2022.
Important Differences
vs Neighbourhood First Policy
| Aspect | This Topic | Neighbourhood First Policy |
|---|---|---|
| Geographical Scope | Southeast Asia, East Asia, and Indo-Pacific region | Immediate neighbors - Pakistan, China, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Afghanistan |
| Policy Approach | Comprehensive engagement across political, strategic, economic, and cultural dimensions | Priority-based approach focusing on immediate security and economic concerns |
| Strategic Objective | Regional integration and Indo-Pacific leadership | Border security, trade facilitation, and conflict prevention |
| Institutional Mechanisms | ASEAN-led forums, East Asia Summit, Quad partnership | SAARC, bilateral mechanisms, border management agreements |
| Economic Focus | Trade agreements, connectivity projects, and regional value chains | Cross-border trade, energy cooperation, and infrastructure development |
vs Extended Neighbourhood
| Aspect | This Topic | Extended Neighbourhood |
|---|---|---|
| Conceptual Framework | Specific policy framework with defined pillars and mechanisms | Broader strategic concept encompassing regions beyond immediate neighbors |
| Implementation Structure | Institutional mechanisms through ASEAN and bilateral partnerships | Flexible approach adapted to different regions and contexts |
| Regional Focus | Southeast Asia and East Asia with Indo-Pacific extension | Central Asia, West Asia, Africa, and other regions of strategic interest |
| Policy Evolution | Evolution from Look East Policy with clear timeline and milestones | Gradual expansion of India's strategic horizon without formal policy declaration |
| Engagement Depth | Deep, comprehensive engagement with structured partnerships | Variable engagement levels based on strategic priorities and opportunities |