How Vulnerable is India's Economy to Foreign Sanctions?
This study addresses India's economic vulnerability to foreign sanctions, providing specific rankings for policymakers, but it is incremental as it applies an existing model to new data.
The paper developed a model to estimate how sanctions restricting input flows affect India's economy through global supply chain changes, finding that India is most vulnerable to sanctions from Saudi Arabia, followed by the UAE, China, Singapore, the US, and Russia.
This paper develops a simple model of the world supply chain to estimate the effects of sanctions that restrict the flow of inputs from one country to another. Such restrictions operate through changes in the weights of the global production network: the sanctioning country ceases supplying certain inputs to the target country and reallocates its production to other destinations. Using the OECD Inter-Country Input--Output tables, we calibrate the model to assess the vulnerability of the Indian economy. We consider two classes of counterfactuals: restrictions on a single sector of a foreign country supplying India, and restrictions on all sectors of a foreign country supplying India. We then rank foreign countries and foreign country-sectors by the risk that their supply restrictions pose to economic activity in India. Our results show that India's greatest country-level vulnerability is to Saudi Arabia, followed by the United Arab Emirates, China, Singapore, the United States, and Russia.