%0 Journal Article %T Fragmentation Trade and Vertical Specialisation: How Does South Asia Compare with China %A C. Veeramani %J Journal of Asian Economic Integration %@ 2631-6854 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/2631684618821550 %X Abstract This article analyses the trends and patterns of export and fragmentation trade by South Asian countries¡ªBangladesh, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. To place the discussion in a comparative perspective, the analysis also covers China. Experience of China and other East Asian countries shows that export-led industrialisation and a high degree of participation in global production networks/value chains, based initially on specialisation in labor-intensive activities, are crucial for sustained employment generation and poverty reduction. However, exports have not become a major engine of growth in South Asian countries. An important reason for this is that South Asia has been locked out of the global production networks/value chains in several industries, except Bangladesh and Sri Lanka in readymade garments and India in automobiles. India¡¯s export basket is biased towards capital- and skill-intensive products, which is an anomaly as the country¡¯s true comparative advantage lies in unskilled labor-intensive activities. We argue that India¡¯s labor laws have had the unintended consequence of discouraging specialisation in labor-intensive stages of the production process in manufacturing industries. Greater integration of domestic industries with global production networks/value chains will accelerate the process of shifting the surplus labor from agriculture to manufacturing. JEL Codes: F10, F15, F4 %K Trade %K fragmentation %K investment %K vertical specialisation %K industry %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2631684618821550