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HIV infections reduce in India, increase in Pakistan: UN Report

Click on the PDF link and then go to page 207 which covers Asia. All is revealed.


yrsnkBx.png





Please desist from using offensive words for our neighbour. Call it geographic trace names like 'Gangadesh' alluding to the fact that most North Indians live and are dominated by the Ganga River Basin. And as a asides they worship and regard Ganga as holy.

Ps. This leaves South Indians who if you want to differantiate can be best described as 'Dravid Indian'.

The dumb gene strikes again!!!
With no context, a goat can be in your bed or in your plate. However, within context of this thread, which is not too much for someone who thinks western PHDs are "half-brainers" but runs away like a rat when questioned about his own credentials, can, of-course, comprehend, at least the title to page 206.

For the rest of the dumb people here or the lazy,
"
Asia and the Pacific has made strong inroads with its HIV response. Sustained and focused efforts to reach key populations have led to major reductions in HIV infections in Cambodia, India, Myanmar, Thailand and Viet Nam between 2010 and 2017. However, epidemics are expanding in Pakistan and Philippines (Figure 15.1).
"
QED

 
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There is about 130,000 people with aids in pakistan

There are 2.1 to 2.3 million in india

Whilst india is 7 times larger in population then Pakistan, it is about 20 times larger in HIV population


Please dont compare us, its not even close

they are celebrating reduction from 2.2 million to 2.1 million, dont break the party
 
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Click on the PDF link and then go to page 207 which covers Asia. All is revealed.


yrsnkBx.png





Please desist from using offensive words for our neighbour. Call it geographic trace names like 'Gangadesh' alluding to the fact that most North Indians live and are dominated by the Ganga River Basin. And as a asides they worship and regard Ganga as holy.

Ps. This leaves South Indians who if you want to differantiate can be best described as 'Dravid Indian'.

Good that you pulled up this graph, i wished you looked inside to understand what graph suggests.

New HIV infections in Asia Pacific
Pakisthan has 7% patients of Asia Pacific region
India has 31% patients of Asia Pacific region

Given that Indian population is 6 times more than pakistan, Indian ratio should have been 7x6, that is around 42% of Asian market, but some how its its just 31%. Or if you look at reverse if india has 31% then pakistan should not have more than 5% just to be on par with indian rate of new hiv infections but you are almost having 50% more than what you should be having even if you where performing as bad as India in HIV cases.
Does that rings the bell?

And this is when Pakistan health care system is no where near what Indian Govt has established for prevention, detection and treatment of HIV. Higher mortality rates will remain for next few decades, as the earlier batch of HIV patients will be nearing there life terms.

Curbing HIV growth rate is very difficult for country like India where huge urbanization leading uneducated or poorly educated male workforces to move to city for work and falls into bad trap of physical satisfactions. None the less, the vocal and practical approach of both govt and ngo's are prime reason to be able to keep check on HIV.
 
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Given that Indian population is 6 times more than pakistan
Great that you guys finally take your size into account ehh? Keep that in mind next tme you brag about size of your economy or number of billionaires in your country please. And yes I noted the info you are talking about. But the thing to note is while there appears to a a surge in infections in Pakistan but to grasp the HIV status you need to have look at longer time stretch. Fact is India historically India has had far greater infections then Pakistan and this can be seen in number of deaths. India is AIDS superpower. However if the surge continues in Pakistan year on and over the next few years then yes Pakistan could end up in the same league as India.

Ps. By the way the India/Pakistan population ratio is about 1 to 6.75. I normally round that off to 7 times.

The dumb gene strikes again
Yes, says a guy from the Ganga which has lower IQ then Pakistan. Go do something useful like teach your people the benefits of toilet manners please.
 
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Great that you guys finally take your size into account ehh? Keep that in mind next tme you brag about size of your economy or number of billionaires in your country please. And yes I noted the info you are talking about. But the thing to note is while there appears to a a surge in infections in Pakistan but to grasp the HIV status you need to have look at longer time stretch. Fact is India historically India has had far greater infections then Pakistan and this can be seen in number of deaths. India is AIDS superpower. However if the surge continues in Pakistan year on and over the next few years then yes Pakistan could end up in the same league as India.

Ps. By the way the India/Pakistan population ratio is about 1 to 6.75. I normally round that off to 7 times.

Yes, says a guy from the Ganga which has lower IQ then Pakistan. Go do something useful like teach your people the benefits of toilet manners please.

Good to know that you have broader view and you look things in deeper sense. And since you take it normally at 7 times, then figures turn more worrisome for Pakistan. My understanding is that for next decade or so the figures will climb drastically for Pakistan and reason would be more detection of HIV patients as heath care reaches more people. Secondly the poor economic conditions would limit the amount of funds needed to educate and channelize resources. As urbanization hits more in Pakistan either due to poor agricultural returns or due to good opportunity in CPEC region, there would be rise HIV cases. And somewhere the poor education setup and missing of basic SEX education at school level is also reason for poor awareness and precautions.
 
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Good that you pulled up this graph, i wished you looked inside to understand what graph suggests.

New HIV infections in Asia Pacific
Pakisthan has 7% patients of Asia Pacific region
India has 31% patients of Asia Pacific region

Given that Indian population is 6 times more than pakistan, Indian ratio should have been 7x6, that is around 42% of Asian market, but some how its its just 31%. Or if you look at reverse if india has 31% then pakistan should not have more than 5% just to be on par with indian rate of new hiv infections but you are almost having 50% more than what you should be having even if you where performing as bad as India in HIV cases.
Does that rings the bell?

And this is when Pakistan health care system is no where near what Indian Govt has established for prevention, detection and treatment of HIV. Higher mortality rates will remain for next few decades, as the earlier batch of HIV patients will be nearing there life terms.

Curbing HIV growth rate is very difficult for country like India where huge urbanization leading uneducated or poorly educated male workforces to move to city for work and falls into bad trap of physical satisfactions. None the less, the vocal and practical approach of both govt and ngo's are prime reason to be able to keep check on HIV.

whenever it suits them they bring population, they never want to talk about GDP to population ration
 
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whenever it suits them they bring population, they never want to talk about GDP to population ration

I think you are good in maths, next time kindly do all sorts of calculations and then compare things.
Numbers will bust the myths themselves :)
 
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I think you are good in maths, next time kindly do all sorts of calculations and then compare things.
Numbers will bust the myths themselves :)

i have very poor math skill, please break down the number for us illiterate Pakistani with the magic of vedic calculus
 
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i have very poor math skill, please break down the number for us illiterate Pakistani with the magic of vedic calculus
Sorry cant help illiterates, please get some primary education so that things could make sense.
 
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Actually you are wrong again. ;)

Why inequality in India is at its highest level in 92 years
soutikbiswas.png

Soutik BiswasIndia correspondent
  • 12 September 2017
_97751112_indiapoorwinterafp.jpg
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionIndia still remains one of the poorest countries in the world
Did India's economic reforms lead to a sharp rise in inequality?

New research by French economists Lucas Chancel and Thomas Piketty, author of Capital, the 2013 bestselling book on capitalism and increasing inequality, clearly points to this conclusion.

They studied household consumption surveys, federal accounts and income tax data from 1922 - when the tax was introduced in India - to 2014.

The data shows that the share of national income accruing to the top 1% of wage earners is now at its highest level since Indians began paying income tax.

The economists say the top 1% of the earners captured less than 21% of the total income in the late 1930s, before dropping to 6% in the early 1980s and rising to 22% today. India, in fact, comes out as a country with one of the highest increase in top 1% income share concentration over the past 30 years," they say.

To be sure, India's economy has undergone a radical transformation over the last three decades.

Up to the 1970s, India was a tightly regulated, straitlaced economy with socialist planning. Growth crawled (3.5% per year), development was weak and poverty endemic.

Some easing of regulation, decline in tax rates and modest reforms led to growth picking up in the 1980s, trundling at around 5% a year. This was followed by some substantial reforms in the early 1990s after which the economy grew briskly, nudging close to double digits in the mid-2000s.

_92393871_mediaitem92393870.jpg
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionLast November's controversial cash ban slowed down the economy
Growth has slowed substantially since then, but India still remains one of the fastest-growing economies in the world. The ongoing slowdown - growth was 5.7% in the April-June quarter, the slowest pace in three years - largely triggered by feeble demand, a controversial cash ban, declining private investment and weak credit growth, is a cause for concern.

And the need for fast-paced growth, according to Nobel Prize winning economist Amartya Sen, is "far from over since India, after two decades of rapid growth, is still one of the poorest countries in the world".

From their latest work on income inequality, Lucas Chancel and Thomas Piketty contend that there has been a "sharp increase in wealth concentration from 1991 to 2012, particularly after 2002". Also, they conclude, India has only been really shining for the top 10% of the population - roughly 80 million people in 2014 - rather than the middle 40%.

The economists plan to release the first World Inequality Report, produced by a network of more than 100 researchers in December, where they will compare India's inequality with other countries and suggest ways to tackle it.

Striking transition
They agree that unequal growth over a period of time is not specific to India, but market economies are not bound to be unequal. India's case is striking in the fact that it is the country with the highest gap between the growth of the top 1% and that of the full population. Incomes of those at the very top have actually grown at a faster pace than in China.

The economists contend that the growth strategy pursued by successive governments has led to a sharp increase in inequality. China also liberalised and opened up after 1978, and experienced a sharp income growth as well as a sharp rise in inequality. This rise was however stabilised in the 2000s and is currently at a lower level than India.

In Russia, the move from a communist to a market economy was "swift and brutal" and today has a similar level of inequality to India.

"This shows that there are different strategies to transit from a highly regulated economy to a liberalised one. In the arrays of possible pathways, India pursued a very unequal way but could probably have chosen another path," Dr Chancel told me.

_97617292_gettyimages-830034954.jpg
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionIndia's economy grew at its slowest pace for three years in the April-to-June quarter
While inequality is rising in most parts of the world, certain countries are resisting this trend. For example, he says, the rise in inequality is much lesser in western Europe than in the Anglo-Saxon world or in emerging markets.

"This largely owes to social security mechanisms that are relatively more favourable to workers than capital as compared to other parts of the world, to relatively more efficient tax systems and government investment in public goods such as education, housing, health or transport."

Clearly, the new research should help promote a vigorous debate on what more can be done to promote more inclusive growth in India and the need for more transparent income and wealth data.



https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-41198638


Listen false flagger put on your true flags. Give me proof that the economy has shrunk you idiot.


Yeah because Dawn is anti-Pakistan, you idiot.
Ha ha coming from sore looser....burn and more burn....Even you people want medicine, still depend on India for disease like AIDS, as India makes 80 per cent of the drugs used globally to combat the deadly disease.

Your country worth making nothing, other than brainless people like you...
 
. .
Actually you are wrong again. ;)

Why inequality in India is at its highest level in 92 years
soutikbiswas.png

Soutik BiswasIndia correspondent
  • 12 September 2017
_97751112_indiapoorwinterafp.jpg
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionIndia still remains one of the poorest countries in the world
Did India's economic reforms lead to a sharp rise in inequality?

New research by French economists Lucas Chancel and Thomas Piketty, author of Capital, the 2013 bestselling book on capitalism and increasing inequality, clearly points to this conclusion.

They studied household consumption surveys, federal accounts and income tax data from 1922 - when the tax was introduced in India - to 2014.

The data shows that the share of national income accruing to the top 1% of wage earners is now at its highest level since Indians began paying income tax.

The economists say the top 1% of the earners captured less than 21% of the total income in the late 1930s, before dropping to 6% in the early 1980s and rising to 22% today. India, in fact, comes out as a country with one of the highest increase in top 1% income share concentration over the past 30 years," they say.

To be sure, India's economy has undergone a radical transformation over the last three decades.

Up to the 1970s, India was a tightly regulated, straitlaced economy with socialist planning. Growth crawled (3.5% per year), development was weak and poverty endemic.

Some easing of regulation, decline in tax rates and modest reforms led to growth picking up in the 1980s, trundling at around 5% a year. This was followed by some substantial reforms in the early 1990s after which the economy grew briskly, nudging close to double digits in the mid-2000s.

_92393871_mediaitem92393870.jpg
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionLast November's controversial cash ban slowed down the economy
Growth has slowed substantially since then, but India still remains one of the fastest-growing economies in the world. The ongoing slowdown - growth was 5.7% in the April-June quarter, the slowest pace in three years - largely triggered by feeble demand, a controversial cash ban, declining private investment and weak credit growth, is a cause for concern.

And the need for fast-paced growth, according to Nobel Prize winning economist Amartya Sen, is "far from over since India, after two decades of rapid growth, is still one of the poorest countries in the world".

From their latest work on income inequality, Lucas Chancel and Thomas Piketty contend that there has been a "sharp increase in wealth concentration from 1991 to 2012, particularly after 2002". Also, they conclude, India has only been really shining for the top 10% of the population - roughly 80 million people in 2014 - rather than the middle 40%.

The economists plan to release the first World Inequality Report, produced by a network of more than 100 researchers in December, where they will compare India's inequality with other countries and suggest ways to tackle it.

Striking transition
They agree that unequal growth over a period of time is not specific to India, but market economies are not bound to be unequal. India's case is striking in the fact that it is the country with the highest gap between the growth of the top 1% and that of the full population. Incomes of those at the very top have actually grown at a faster pace than in China.

The economists contend that the growth strategy pursued by successive governments has led to a sharp increase in inequality. China also liberalised and opened up after 1978, and experienced a sharp income growth as well as a sharp rise in inequality. This rise was however stabilised in the 2000s and is currently at a lower level than India.

In Russia, the move from a communist to a market economy was "swift and brutal" and today has a similar level of inequality to India.

"This shows that there are different strategies to transit from a highly regulated economy to a liberalised one. In the arrays of possible pathways, India pursued a very unequal way but could probably have chosen another path," Dr Chancel told me.

_97617292_gettyimages-830034954.jpg
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionIndia's economy grew at its slowest pace for three years in the April-to-June quarter
While inequality is rising in most parts of the world, certain countries are resisting this trend. For example, he says, the rise in inequality is much lesser in western Europe than in the Anglo-Saxon world or in emerging markets.

"This largely owes to social security mechanisms that are relatively more favourable to workers than capital as compared to other parts of the world, to relatively more efficient tax systems and government investment in public goods such as education, housing, health or transport."

Clearly, the new research should help promote a vigorous debate on what more can be done to promote more inclusive growth in India and the need for more transparent income and wealth data.



https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-41198638


Listen false flagger put on your true flags. Give me proof that the economy has shrunk you idiot.


Yeah because Dawn is anti-Pakistan, you idiot.

Here you go Indian pharma company even in US and open your small eyes and see where we are and where you are ! Tomorrow don't cry that you people don't get visa to india for treatment. as there are 1000's such applications


Actually you are wrong again. ;)

Why inequality in India is at its highest level in 92 years
soutikbiswas.png

Soutik BiswasIndia correspondent
  • 12 September 2017
_97751112_indiapoorwinterafp.jpg
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionIndia still remains one of the poorest countries in the world
Did India's economic reforms lead to a sharp rise in inequality?

New research by French economists Lucas Chancel and Thomas Piketty, author of Capital, the 2013 bestselling book on capitalism and increasing inequality, clearly points to this conclusion.

They studied household consumption surveys, federal accounts and income tax data from 1922 - when the tax was introduced in India - to 2014.

The data shows that the share of national income accruing to the top 1% of wage earners is now at its highest level since Indians began paying income tax.

The economists say the top 1% of the earners captured less than 21% of the total income in the late 1930s, before dropping to 6% in the early 1980s and rising to 22% today. India, in fact, comes out as a country with one of the highest increase in top 1% income share concentration over the past 30 years," they say.

To be sure, India's economy has undergone a radical transformation over the last three decades.

Up to the 1970s, India was a tightly regulated, straitlaced economy with socialist planning. Growth crawled (3.5% per year), development was weak and poverty endemic.

Some easing of regulation, decline in tax rates and modest reforms led to growth picking up in the 1980s, trundling at around 5% a year. This was followed by some substantial reforms in the early 1990s after which the economy grew briskly, nudging close to double digits in the mid-2000s.

_92393871_mediaitem92393870.jpg
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionLast November's controversial cash ban slowed down the economy
Growth has slowed substantially since then, but India still remains one of the fastest-growing economies in the world. The ongoing slowdown - growth was 5.7% in the April-June quarter, the slowest pace in three years - largely triggered by feeble demand, a controversial cash ban, declining private investment and weak credit growth, is a cause for concern.

And the need for fast-paced growth, according to Nobel Prize winning economist Amartya Sen, is "far from over since India, after two decades of rapid growth, is still one of the poorest countries in the world".

From their latest work on income inequality, Lucas Chancel and Thomas Piketty contend that there has been a "sharp increase in wealth concentration from 1991 to 2012, particularly after 2002". Also, they conclude, India has only been really shining for the top 10% of the population - roughly 80 million people in 2014 - rather than the middle 40%.

The economists plan to release the first World Inequality Report, produced by a network of more than 100 researchers in December, where they will compare India's inequality with other countries and suggest ways to tackle it.

Striking transition
They agree that unequal growth over a period of time is not specific to India, but market economies are not bound to be unequal. India's case is striking in the fact that it is the country with the highest gap between the growth of the top 1% and that of the full population. Incomes of those at the very top have actually grown at a faster pace than in China.

The economists contend that the growth strategy pursued by successive governments has led to a sharp increase in inequality. China also liberalised and opened up after 1978, and experienced a sharp income growth as well as a sharp rise in inequality. This rise was however stabilised in the 2000s and is currently at a lower level than India.

In Russia, the move from a communist to a market economy was "swift and brutal" and today has a similar level of inequality to India.

"This shows that there are different strategies to transit from a highly regulated economy to a liberalised one. In the arrays of possible pathways, India pursued a very unequal way but could probably have chosen another path," Dr Chancel told me.

_97617292_gettyimages-830034954.jpg
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionIndia's economy grew at its slowest pace for three years in the April-to-June quarter
While inequality is rising in most parts of the world, certain countries are resisting this trend. For example, he says, the rise in inequality is much lesser in western Europe than in the Anglo-Saxon world or in emerging markets.

"This largely owes to social security mechanisms that are relatively more favourable to workers than capital as compared to other parts of the world, to relatively more efficient tax systems and government investment in public goods such as education, housing, health or transport."

Clearly, the new research should help promote a vigorous debate on what more can be done to promote more inclusive growth in India and the need for more transparent income and wealth data.



https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-41198638


Listen false flagger put on your true flags. Give me proof that the economy has shrunk you idiot.


Yeah because Dawn is anti-Pakistan, you idiot.
If your small brain can't grasp, then here you go more details

Indian companies received 304 Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) approvals from the US Food and Drug Administration (USFDA) in 2017. The country accounts for around 30 per cent (by volume) and about 10 per cent (value) in the US$ 70-80 billion US generics market.

Your country even do not have 1 FDA approved manufacturing facility?
 
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Yes, says a guy from the Ganga which has lower IQ then Pakistan. Go do something useful like teach your people the benefits of toilet manners please.

Show me what you guys have achieved with the so called higher IQ - greater patents than India? Greater contribution to scientific research than India? Greater contribution in peer reviewed journals? (Heck! how man journals in science does Pakistanis have?) Are your academic institution ranked higher than India? Have Pakistani brains reached CEO status of big IT companies, banks, other institutions? Have Pakistanis achieved more in Business? What about Space? What about Pharmacy? What about Medical research? Finally, What about Leadership? I can go on and on and every where you just can't match the Hindu intellect and hard work. All factual unlike you, who call PhD. holders from some esteemed institutions "Half Brained".

You can go hug your toilets for all we care. If there is one other thing Pakistanis are famous for in the world is poor hygiene - your country of origin is the only few last remaining countries that is struggling to get rid of p0li0. A disease that has everything to do with fecal matter and bad, real bad hygiene. I would think twice shaking hands with you!
 
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