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GDP Purchasing Power Parity 2014

Bang

We are poorest and chinese are just 1 rank above us.

Most of the Chinese data provided by Communist govt are fake, without free media, opposition in poltical system ,world not getting the real truth.There are some rich in china mostly the communist members all others are just industrial labours and low paid workers.

The extent of Indian economic data fudging was completely exposed to the whole world. India became a laughing stock. EVERYONE just dismissed it as Indian delusions issued by the ministry of Indian propaganda.

I stand by my statement that looking at the dreadful status of the Indian economy. It shouldn't be anywhere near the top 10 economies.

Having a country like India which has no industry, no infrastructure, barely any exports, runs twin deficits, has a collapsed currency should not be ranked in the top 10 economies.

The only reason India gets any global importance is due to the 'sympathy vote'. Not based on any achievement or power of its own.

Just like the only time India is relevant in geopolitics is when it's being a stooge to a bigger foreign power. It's never important by itself. India is the perfect little pawn for the British and Americans. Since the British created your country, Indians feel indebted to the West, so you always do as told.
 
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The extent of Indian economic data fudging was completely exposed to the whole world. India became a laughing stock. EVERYONE just dismissed it as Indian delusions issued by the ministry of Indian propaganda.

I stand by my statement that looking at the dreadful status of the Indian economy. It shouldn't be anywhere near the top 10 economies.

Having a country like India which has no industry, no infrastructure, barely any exports, runs twin deficits, has a collapsed currency should not be ranked in the top 10 economies.

The only reason India gets any global importance is due to the 'sympathy vote'. Not based on any achievement or power of its own.

Just like the only time India is relevant in geopolitics is when it's being a stooge to a bigger foreign power. It's never important by itself. India is the perfect little pawn for the British and Americans. Since the British created your country, Indians feel indebted to the West, so you always do as told.
Why the hell are u scratching your tiny Asian balls so much over us Indians?? First tell your CPC bots to be a little less paranoid about India and stop building defence infra all along the Western Front.If Indian data is fudged then how come your own CPC is coming up with such figures??

Here's the latest Chinese ranking of so called Comprehensive National Power (CNP) from the think tank CASS (Chinese Academy of Social Sciences)
1. USA
2. Japan
3. Germany
4. Canada
5. France
6. Russia
7. China
8. UK
9. India
10. Italy


Here are some more:
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Why the hell are u scratching your tiny Asian balls so much over us Indians?? First tell your CPC bots to be a little less paranoid about India and stop building defence infra all along the Western Front.If Indian data is fudged then how come your own CPC is coming up with such figures??

Here's the latest Chinese ranking of so called Comprehensive National Power (CNP) from the think tank CASS (Chinese Academy of Social Sciences)
1. USA
2. Japan
3. Germany
4. Canada
5. France
6. Russia
7. China
8. UK
9. India
10. Italy


The Chinese gov has its own agenda for creating such a rank. But their own members won't agree with this rank.
 
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The Chinese gov has its own agenda for creating such a rank. But their own members won't agree with this rank.
If the argument is that every ranking has an agenda overt or covert then there's no point of coming up with data on this forum for every thread at a drop of a hat. Let everyone claim whatever they want.Everyone should be free to have his/her opinion about their own country.If someone comes up with unrealistic figures there should be no need to object to it or correct tht person.Because he/she has got his/her AGENDA!!
 
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Why the hell are u scratching your tiny Asian balls so much over us Indians?? First tell your CPC bots to be a little less paranoid about India and stop building defence infra all along the Western Front.If Indian data is fudged then how come your own CPC is coming up with such figures??

Here's the latest Chinese ranking of so called Comprehensive National Power (CNP) from the think tank CASS (Chinese Academy of Social Sciences)
1. USA
2. Japan
3. Germany
4. Canada
5. France
6. Russia
7. China
8. UK
9. India
10. Italy


Here are some more:View attachment 216115 View attachment 216116

It's that 'sympathy vote' India always gets.
 
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If the argument is that every ranking has an agenda overt or covert then there's no point of coming up with data on this forum for every thread at a drop of a hat. Let everyone claim whatever they want.Everyone should be free to have his/her opinion about their own country.If someone comes up with unrealistic figures there should be no need to object to it or correct tht person.Because he/she has got his/her AGENDA!!

These kind of list is pointless. Actual data like industrial production, energy consumption, cannot be faked.
 
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Make in India vs. Make in China
SunAnchor_2171658f.jpg

Last Novemeber 2014, Tata Motor’s Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) opened its first plant in Changshu, China. The luxury car-maker’s $1.78-billion Make-in-China push has come a little over a month after Tata Group chairman Cyrus Mistry confessed to be greatly encouraged under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s leadership to join the “Make In India” programme that, he said, brings together industry and government for crafting a new future.

This was at the glittery launch of “Make in India” in Delhi where a galaxy of global corporate leaders ranging from Mukesh Ambani of Reliance Industries Ltd. to Lockheed Martin India CEO Phil Shaw in response to Mr. Modi’s call had pledged to invest and manufacture in India.

The pitch had its origin in the Prime Minister’s Independence Day speech when he invited global companies to pick India to locate factories, promising to replace red tape with red-carpet welcomes.

The jobs and incomes for Indians these factories would generate, he said, would in turn create the market for their output.

The goal the Modi government has set is to make India break into the top 50 in the World Bank’s ease of business index ranking from the current 134th position.

When companies such as Tata Motors choose where to locate a new factory, they consider a range of factors. But India fares badly on most of the counts. For instance, contract enforcement takes 1,420 days and going through the 12 procedures for starting business typically takes 27 days.

India’s chronic infrastructure and logistics deficit with inefficient transport networks makes it tough for manufacturing companies to achieve just-in-time production.

The Modi government has said it wants to radically de-bureaucratise, deregulate, change officers’ mindsets, cut paperwork and remove the notorious legal and infrastructure hurdles to starting and doing business in India. This is not the first time India is focussing on its manufacturing sector. In 2006, the UPA government put out a national strategy for manufacturing. It even dubbed 2006-15 as the “decade of manufacturing in India.” The five-year period of 2005-06 to 2009-10 was one of a smart 10 per cent plus growth for the manufacturing sector when several advantages — engineering skills, a growing domestic market, a raw material base and a large pool of skilled labour — trumped the vast barriers to doing business in India.

JLR’s China launch has set alarm bells ringing for the Modi government: “Make in India” will have to go quickly from being a statement of intent to real action on the ground. Markets across Indian towns and cities that are flooded with Chinese products, more so around festivals such as Deepavali, are grim reminders of how Made-in-China has come to dominate homes and offices. From furniture and gadgets to industrial equipment, India is importing almost all products from its neighbour, even yarn for saris. It is estimated that over 99 per cent of Bangalore silk saris are being made with Chinese silk yarn.

As a result, the rapidly growing bilateral trade between the two neighbours is tilting heavily in China’s favour, at a rate that India has termed unsustainable. Bilateral trade crossed $65 billion in 2013, but while India exported $15 billion worth of goods to China, but imported $51 bn. The quality of trade also goes against India. India exports raw materials such as iron ore but imports manufactured goods.

In pursuit of its reforms agenda of 1979, China has followed a more-exports-at-any-cost policy to boost its economy. The Chinese government’s support to manufacturing in the form of affordable cost of funds, cheap inputs and world-class infrastructure gives it an advantage over Indian manufacturers. The Confederation of Indian Industry estimates that Chinese manufacturing as a result enjoys a cost advantage of about 10 per cent over Indian manufacturing.

A fallout of which is dumping of products on big markets like India. To protect domestic manufacturers, India has been imposing an anti-dumping duty on 159 products — ranging from chemicals, petrochemicals, pharmaceutical, steel, fibres and consumer goods — imported from China since 1992.

The spurt in factory imports from China has coincided with a sharp slide in India’s manufacturing sector despite the UPA government’s efforts to push the sector.

Manufacturing output grew barely 1 per cent in 2012-13. In 2013-14, factory output contracted (-) 0.7 per cent. The share of the jobs-creating sector in the GDP has declined to 14.9 per cent in 2013-14 from the peak level of 16.2 per cent in 2009-10.

India’s advantage
But there is hope still. A new index of manufacturing costs, including productivity-adjusted wages, electricity, natural gas and currency movements, created by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) of the world’s 25 biggest exporters shows China’s traditional cost advantage is now under pressure denting its attractiveness. Under pressure from the U.S., China has had to appreciate its currency by 30 per cent since 2006, which is eroding its exports’ cost competitiveness. Just-in data from the International Monetary Fund show that China is no longer the largest trade surplus economy in the world.

Therein lies an opportunity “Make in India” must tap. India’s labour costs are among the lowest in the world. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, average labour compensation (including pay, benefits, social insurance, and taxes) in India’s organised manufacturing sector increased only marginally, from $0.68 an hour in 1999 to $1.50 an hour currently. The average compensation in China’s manufacturing sector in contrast rose 20 percent year-on-year in the same period to $3 an hour.

Besides, the cost competitiveness, India boasts a nearly 500-million-strong labour force comprising unskilled workers and English-speaking scientists, researchers, and engineers, making it a potential destination for cost-effective research and development-oriented manufacturing.

Recent sporadic instances of the odd Chinese manufacturer setting up shop in India and a few Indian companies moving production bases back home from China are encouraging. Havells, Godrej, Micromax and auto-components maker Bosch are amongst a handful of companies that have recently moved back to India some part of their manufacturing or outsourcing in China owing to currency, labour and other cost advantages.

As Chinese factories move up the value-chain to hi-tech manufacturing, opportunities would open up for Indian entrepreneurs but they are up against stiff competition. On the BCG ranking, however, several countries, including the U.S. and Mexico, are better poised and ranked above India as of now to take gain from China’s loss of competitiveness. The coming together of smart entrepreneurs, employees, infrastructure and know-how could overtime become a durable advantage, as had happened in China’s case.

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econ_india-a_315inline.jpg

Keywords: Make in India, Make in China, Chinese manufacturer, BCG ranking, Tata Motor’s Jaguar Land Rover
 
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Why you guys have to debate with Indian people? They are not bad people and it is nothing about good or bad.I respect india great progress after its independence,a stable India is a great help to the other world,I TRULLY wish India can prosper. As one of a few countries in this planet whom can send satellites into space,India deserves our respect,no need to degrade it.
In my view, PPP is a joke, no one in China is happy with our PPP number passes USA,it is nothing with Indian rank,actually our officials don't take this news serious,just because we believe industrial ability is much much more important,so GDP is much more accurate than PPP when measuring national power.If India love PPP, it is OK,why you guys have to persuade them to change their thought?
 
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I like value-added.
@Shotgunner51

Valuation based on market price (e.g. GDP nominal) are always the only objective comparisons especially in a globalized economy in which production means are traded heavily across borders. Only nominal GDP would be applicable in comparing relative economic strength, credit/debt status, financial strength. Yes, manufacturing value added is also one of the best ways of gauging how developed is an economy in the area of industrialization.

In some analysis, PPP would be applicable e.g. poverty (say US$1.25 PPP for specific subjects of study), purchasing power of low income population e.g., cos these segments have less chance of purchasing from international market.
 
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Why you guys have to debate with Indian people? They are not bad people and it is nothing about good or bad.I respect india great progress after its independence,a stable India is a great help to the other world,I TRULLY wish India can prosper. As one of a few countries in this planet whom can send satellites into space,India deserves our respect,no need to degrade it.
In my view, PPP is a joke, no one in China is happy with our PPP number passes USA,it is nothing with Indian rank,actually our officials don't take this news serious,just because we believe industrial ability is much much more important,so GDP is much more accurate than PPP when measuring national power.If India love PPP, it is OK,why you guys have to persuade them to change their thought?
You are right. They like PPP, why shall we preach them?
I personally emphasise manufacturing value-added and manufacturing value-added per capita.
@Shotgunner51
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These kind of list is pointless. Actual data like industrial production, energy consumption, cannot be faked.
India's energy demand to outpace China and Russia by 2035
India's energy consumption will rise by 132 per cent by 2035, outpacing demand growth in Russia, China and Brazil, BP's Global Energy Outlook said.

"Global energy demand continues to grow but that growth is slowing and mainly driven by emerging economies - led by China and India," according to the BP Energy Outlook 2035.

"India's demand growth of 132 per cent outpaces each of the BRIC countries as Russia (20 per cent), China (71 per cent), and Brazil (71 per cent) all expand slower. India's growth is almost double the non-OECD aggregate of 69 per cent," it said.
 
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You are right. They like PPP, why shall we preach them?
I personally emphasise manufacturing value-added and manufacturing value-added per capita.
@Shotgunner51
View attachment 216165

Yes, despite topping the world in total amount, China significantly lacks behind the top 3 industrialized power of #1 Japan, #2 Germany and #3 South Korea in per capita.

untitled3-png.208605

The fast growing trend is still optimistic, there is no time-table yet but the gaps with Japan/Germany/SK are closing every year.
untitled4-jpg.209575
 
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Yes, despite topping the world in total amount, China significantly lacks behind the top 3 industrialized power of #1 Japan, #2 Germany and #3 South Korea in per capita.

untitled3-png.208605

The fast growing trend is still optimistic, there is no time-table yet but the gaps with Japan/Germany/SK are closing every year.
untitled4-jpg.209575
This is one list I haven't heard Indians brag about.......

India's energy demand to outpace China and Russia by 2035
India's energy consumption will rise by 132 per cent by 2035, outpacing demand growth in Russia, China and Brazil, BP's Global Energy Outlook said.

"Global energy demand continues to grow but that growth is slowing and mainly driven by emerging economies - led by China and India," according to the BP Energy Outlook 2035.

"India's demand growth of 132 per cent outpaces each of the BRIC countries as Russia (20 per cent), China (71 per cent), and Brazil (71 per cent) all expand slower. India's growth is almost double the non-OECD aggregate of 69 per cent," it said.


India will outpace Zchina by 2035???? I wonder how accurate is this statement.. LOL
 
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