Mukesh Ambani has done it again. The man who built a fortune on petrochemicals and telecoms now announces India's biggest share sale, and the City of London is practically salivating. British investors, those perennial sniffers for empire-era dividends, are lining up for a strategic partnership. It is a spectacle that would have thrilled Lord Curzon: the Indian tycoon, the British capital, the promise of mutual enrichment. But beneath the fanfare lies a discomfiting pattern, a historical recursion that ought to make us pause.
Consider the numbers: Reliance Industries aims to raise billions, diluting its equity in a manner that would have been unthinkable a decade ago. The company, once a symbol of swadeshi self-reliance, now courts foreign money with the enthusiasm of a debutante at a ball. British investors, in turn, see a chance to plant their flag in India’s booming economy, a beachhead for their funds and, one suspects, their influence. It is the East India Company reborn, not in red-coated clerks but in suits and spreadsheets.
We are told this is globalisation, a win-win. And indeed, the logic is impeccable. India needs capital for infrastructure, technology, and green energy. Britain offers a deep pocket and a regulatory environment that respects property rights. But let us not be naive. This is not a partnership of equals. It is a transaction in which India, once again, sells a piece of its sovereignty. The share sale gives British investors a seat at the table, a voice in strategic decisions. In time, that voice may become a demand, and the demand a dictate.
The Victorians were masters of this dance. They did not conquer India with armies alone; they conquered with loans, railways, and telegraph lines. They built India’s infrastructure, yes, but they built it to serve Manchester and London, not Bombay and Calcutta. The result was a colonial economy: raw materials out, finished goods in. Today, the raw material is equity, and the finished good is profit. British investors will extract returns on their capital, and those returns will flow back to London, not to Indian villages.
Do not mistake me for a protectionist. I am no friend of tariffs or autarky. Capital flows are the lifeblood of modern economies. But we must recognise that every investment carries a political price. When British institutions hold significant stakes in Indian enterprises, they gain leverage. They can influence corporate governance, push for policies that favour their interests, and even sway government decisions through the threat of capital flight. It is a soft imperialism, more subtle than gunboats but no less real.
The irony is that Ambani himself is a product of India’s economic nationalism. His father, Dhirubhai, built Reliance in the face of a socialist state, using ingenious strategies to navigate licensing and quotas. Mukesh has inherited that knack, but he also inherits a world where nationalism is passé. He is a globalist by necessity, and perhaps by inclination. Yet by courting British investors he is unwittingly repeating the pattern of Indian elites who, from the days of the Raj, have sought legitimacy through foreign association.
What can be done? Not much, I fear. The die is cast. But we can at least observe the trend with clear eyes. This share sale is a bellwether. If it succeeds, others will follow. Indian companies will increasingly look to London, New York, and Dubai for funds, diluting their Indian character. The result will be a strange hybrid: Indian in geography, global in ownership, and ultimately accountable to no Indian constituency.
Perhaps I am too cynical. Perhaps this partnership will usher in a new era of prosperity, lifting millions from poverty and transforming India into a developed nation. Perhaps British investors will be benevolent overlords, content with dividends and silent governance. But history teaches otherwise. Every time India has opened its doors to foreign capital without strong safeguards, it has ended up a vassal. The question is: have we learned nothing from the suffragettes, the nationalists, and the economists who warned us about the dangers of foreign entanglements?
Ambani’s announcement is a milestone, but it is a milestone on a well-worn path. We can only hope that this time the destination is different. But do not hold your breath.








