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India “Beats” France & U.K In Eight Great Powers Of 2025 List But Two Asian Nations Continue To Lead India

Usually, at the beginning or end of a year, various organizations and experts indulge in the exercise of “global ranking” of the countries. These rankings differ from one another as the metrics of their respective rankings vary.

One such ranking has been just released on who will be “The Eight Great Powers of 2025.” Here, the criteria for determining power have been economic heft and dynamism, social and political influence, political stability, and raw military capability.

Eight Great powers so chosen are: The United States of America, the People’s Republic of China, the Russian Federation, Japan, India, France, the United Kingdom, and South Korea.

In other words, as per this ranking, the U.S. continues to be the foremost power in the world, followed by China. India is recognized now as a major global power. And so is South Korea.

Thus, of the eight Great Powers of 2025, four are Asian countries – India, China, Japan, and South Korea. If anything, this only proves that the global power is shifting from the Euro-Atlantic to the Indo-Pacific.

For nearly 500 years, the West determined the central balance of global power. In the last century, if the U.S. played a decisive role, it was as an Atlantic power. But, in this century, if the U.S. continues playing that role, it will be so as an Indo-Pacific power.

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This ranking has been done for the American outlet “19FortyFive” by Dr. Robert Farley, who has taught security and diplomacy courses at the Patterson School and authored books such as “Grounded: The Case for Abolishing the United States Air Force,” “Patents for Power: Intellectual Property Law and the Diffusion of Military Technology” and most recently “Waging War with Gold: National Security and the Finance Domain Across the Ages.”

The ranking points out the strengths and weaknesses of each of the listed “great powers.” Apart from its undoubted economic and technological heft, the United States is said to have the world’s most sophisticated and expensive defense establishment. It is “the only country that can conduct expeditionary operations at a moment’s notice on every continent.”

While attaching importance to China’s “first-rate military power,” the ranking does point out its mixed to negative demographic trajectories over the past few years and “the often brutal infighting between China’s political elites, a tendency that the rise of Xi Jinping has obscured but hardly eliminated.”

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It also says China’s technological gap with the U.S. is shrinking by bringing “its robust tech economy into harmony with its defense industrial base.”

While the ranking notes that since 1949, China’s greatest weakness has always been its lack of firm alliances, Beijing has taken advantage of the Russia-Ukraine War to bind Russia more tightly into its economic embrace. Besides, China’s slow, careful commercial expansion into Central Asia and Africa has been noted with regard to the increase of its strategic reach.

Despite its debilitating economy (because of the Western sanctions) and the falling demography (made worse by the loss of many young men in the war with Ukraine), Russia, according to the ranking, has many advantages.

“Russia is immensely large with a profound natural resource endowment. Its population is old and sick but large and relatively well-educated. And Russia retains vast numbers of nuclear weapons, which have allowed it to carry on its war with Ukraine without much interference from the much wealthier Atlantic powers,” it says.




Vladimir Putin and Volodymyr Zelensky. (Edited Image)

Japan is fourth in the ranking because of what is said to be its undoubted economic and technological strength. The ranking takes note of Tokyo “breaking out of its post-war geostrategic slumber” by spending more on security and expanding its defense industrial base.

Fifth-ranked India, described as “a newcomer” in the list, is noted for its “healthy demographic foundation,” economic growth at “a higher rate than any country on this list,” and open political system that “has allowed it to give a home to innovative technology firms, tightly linked with the global economy and increasingly able to throw their weight around,” and strong “military relations with Britain, France, the United States, and Russia that give it access to the most modern technology.”

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Author and veteran journalist Prakash Nanda has been commenting on Indian politics, foreign policy on strategic affairs for nearly three decades. A former National Fellow of the Indian Council for Historical Research and recipient of the Seoul Peace Prize Scholarship, he is also a Distinguished Fellow at the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies. He has been a Visiting Professor at Yonsei University (Seoul) and FMSH (Paris). He has also been the Chairman of the Governing Body of leading colleges of the Delhi University. Educated at the Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, he has undergone professional courses at Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy (Boston) and Seoul National University (Seoul). Apart from writing many monographs and chapters for various books, he has authored books: Prime Minister Modi: Challenges Ahead; Rediscovering Asia: Evolution of India’s Look-East Policy; Rising India: Friends and Foes; Nuclearization of Divided Nations: Pakistan, Koreas and India; Vajpayee’s Foreign Policy: Daring the Irreversible. He has written over 3000 articles and columns in India’s national media and several international dailies and magazines. CONTACT: prakash.nanda@hotmail.com
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