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A New World Order

Mytime

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India is regaining its place as one of the world’s great economies, but major hurdles remain
Minhaz Merchant

In 1700, the British Empire was a distant gleam in the eye of traders from the East India Company who had set up mercantile posts along India’s busy port towns. India was a prize catch. Though fragmented, it had a population of 165 million and the world’s largest economy. China was the world’s second most populous nation with 138 million people. It was also the world’s second largest economy after India. Together, the two Asian giants produced over 50% of global economic output. The yet-to-be United States was still a smattering of 13 British colonies.
And Britain? It had a population of 8.6 million and produced a mere 3% of the world’s output. Colonisation, the Atlantic slave trade and the industrial revolution changed the world dramatically over the next 150 years. By 1870, the average Briton was six times richer than the average Indian or Chinese.
If history teaches us anything, it is that it repeats itself. In 2016, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), China’s economy will overtake America’s. Chinese GDP, assuming an average annual growth rate over the next five years of 9.50%, even as the global economy slows, will rise from $11.20 trillion (by purchasing power parity) in 2011 to $17.50 trillion in 2016. US GDP, hit by the eurozone meltdown, is likely to grow at an annual average of an estimated 1.75% during the same five-year period, rising to barely $16.60 trillion from its current level of $15.20 trillion – losing its status as the world’s largest economy for the first time since the late 19th century. Meanwhile, establishing another milestone, India, despite the current slowdown, is set to become the world’s third largest economy – ahead of Japan – in 2011-12 with a GDP (PPP) of $4.45 trillion.
Beyond the numbers, however, lies the real story. For the first time since the West became the world’s dominant geopolitical, military and economic force 200 years ago, the tide has turned decisively. The rise of China and India, the
relative decline of the US and the fall of Western Europe will establish a new world order.
For India, the next few years present great challenges but even greater opportunities. The defining relationship of the 21st century, as US President Barack Obama declared on his visit to India last November, will be between the US and India. For the US, India serves two purposes. First, as a counterweight to China, militarily and strategically. Second, as a market for the US economy which can no longer rely on sclerotic Europe. India will have the world’s largest middle class by 2025 – double today’s 270 million. Just as it was in 1700 to European traders and colonisers, India is once again the big prize.
The US is a declining economic power but will remain dominant militarily for several decades. It has the world’s largest blue sea naval fleet led by 11 aircraft carriers. In contrast, China’s first aircraft carrier (of vintage Ukrainian stock) has only recently commenced sea trials. India’s lone aircraft carrier, INS Viraat, is a 52-year-old British craft.
China’s rise could be slowed by two imponderables: one, the deep suspicion of its hyperpower among the littoral states of the South China Sea, especially Vietnam. Two, the unsolved dispute with Taiwan. While the present Kuomintang government in Taipei is friendlier to Beijing than previous regimes in Taiwan, the island remains a point of friction between China and the US. Tibet and the restive region of Xinjiang, with its large Muslim population of Uighars, are other worries for China’s communist government. The largest concern, though, is the possibility of a ‘Chinese Spring’ erupting as more affluent Chinese seek real freedoms. It is a social time bomb India must note as it nuances its relationship with Beijing.
India at first sight seems an unlikely global power. It has an obsessively hostile neighbour to its northwest, a four-decadeold Maoist insurgency, corrupt political governance and over 445 million poor people who live on less than Rs 26 a day. India’s economy and markets are growing despite political misgovernance. The entrepreneurial energy unleashed by economic liberalisation in 1991 has given India a seat at the high table of world affairs. And yet, a timid foreign policy has let slip the advantages a world, starved of growth, offers India’s demographically charged economy.
To play a role in world affairs in line with its size, population and economy, India needs to think and act like a major power. It must fix governance at home, build a strategic foreign policy and leverage its demographic and economic assets. In the emerging world order, the India-US partnership will be as pivotal as the Anglo-US axis was for most of the 20th century. China will play the role of the old Soviet Union with economic satellites in an arc curving down from central Asia to Africa where China is now the world’s biggest investor.
As one of the pivots in this new world order, India has three priceless assets and two damaging liabilities. The assets are its growing economy, market size and plural democracy. The liabilities? Misgovernance and social inequality. Unless good governance overlays our economic growth, poverty will persist. No nation can be great if nearly half of its people live in penury. Inclusive growth follows from good governance. Without that, India’s rise as a great power will falter.

Article Window Times of India
 
The people who run Indian governance are the biggest fruitcakes on Earth.
 
Times of India article? Now I know why you didn't show the source. :rofl:

I thought there was source in the link , however i should have known you trust only Xinhua , next time please drop in to post on a Xinhua article , thanks :wave:
 
WOW
we used to be the largest economy before 1700!!!
damn those brits

According to the Times of India. :lol:

Here is a real source... the Financial Times.

Financial Times - China at number two... and counting

China, with an ancient writing system and the world’s biggest economy for 18 of the past 20 centuries, is simply restoring affairs to their “natural” state.

And another source, this time from the BBC:

BBC News - Location, location and how the West was won

China will soon reclaim its position as the world's biggest economy - a role it has held for 18 of the past 20 centuries.
 
When the British arrived in the subcontinent, it was a bunch of independent kindgoms who mostly fought against each other.

The British unified these independent kindgoms, into an entity known as "British India". Which was later split in half due to the religious divide.

"India is merely a geographical expression. It is no more a single country than the Equator."

- Winston Churchill
 
what do u mean we?

there was no such thing as india back in those days.
india as u call it were many tiny kingdoms.

china which was a unified state was the world's largest economy for 18 of the past 20 centuries.
Incase you're still in the 20th century & unable to get past those chequered blinkers of yours let me remind you that under the Mughal Empire India was a much larger place than what is covered by the current state ! It didn't cover most of the southern states but all the other three directions were over & above the boundaries that are demarcated today.
 
Unfortunately, the liabilities will remain for years to come - misgovernance and social inequality. Do we have any statesmen of caliber? We will probably never have a Chanakya to turn things around and there lies the rub. The present lot of politicians have made politics into a family business with no concern for the country. We are saddled with parliamentarians who are not law makers but law breakers.

As of May 2011, approximately 30 percent parliamentarians have serious criminal cases pending against them !! And these include extortion, murder, attempt to murder, rape, corruption, cheating, land grabbing, illegal hawala transactions, money laundering, massive tax evasion, graft running into thousands of crores, and numerous scams!

And we hope for 'Good Governance'? Forget it. Our netas don't have the bl00dy time for our benighted country.

The mantra of our netas is: "Make hay while the sun shines"! :tdown:
 
For India, the next few years present great challenges but even greater opportunities. The defining relationship of the 21st century, as US President Barack Obama declared on his visit to India last November, will be between the US and India. For the US, India serves two purposes. First, as a counterweight to China, militarily and strategically. Second, as a market for the US economy which can no longer rely on sclerotic Europe. India will have the world’s largest middle class by 2025 – double today’s 270 million. Just as it was in 1700 to European traders and colonisers, India is once again the big prize.

Economics should be mutual, but the bozos in the Indian center keep screwing it up. The FDI decision in Retail is a case in point.

---------- Post added at 11:52 AM ---------- Previous post was at 11:50 AM ----------

Unfortunately, the liabilities will remain for years to come - misgovernance and social inequality. Do we have any statesmen of caliber? We will probably never have a Chanakya to turn things around and there lies the rub. The present lot of politicians have made politics into a family business with no concern for the country. We are saddled with parliamentarians who are not law makers but law breakers.

As of May 2011, approximately 30 percent parliamentarians have serious criminal cases pending against them !! And these include extortion, murder, attempt to murder, rape, corruption, cheating, land grabbing, illegal hawala transactions, money laundering, massive tax evasion, graft running into thousands of crores, and numerous scams!

And we hope for 'Good Governance'? Forget it. Our netas don't have the bl00dy time for our benighted country.

The mantra of our netas is: "Make hay while the sun shines"! :tdown:

I second that A- holes of the highest order.
 
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