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How far is India behind China

ChinaToday

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The debate in a small group earlier this week was about how far India is behind China. The quick numbers tossed out varied all the way from 10 to 25 years and more.

Figuring out the gap between the two "rising giants of Asia" is in fact an instructive study.

For instance, China's GDP in 2011 was $6.99 trillion, or nearly four times India's $1.84 trillion.

If the Indian economy were to grow at an annual average of 7.8 per cent (the rate for the past decade), it would take 18 years to get to China's current size. If growth were to accelerate to nine per cent, it would still take 15 years.

Could India have avoided falling so far behind China?

After all, when China began its Four Modernisations in 1978, the two economies were of roughly the same size ($145-148 billion).

Even in 1991, when India began its reforms, China's economy was only 40 per cent bigger than India's $268 billion.

The answer is that, in many ways, India in 1991 was already two decades and more behind China on key indicators, and it has not closed the gap.

For instance, China's literacy rate in 1991 was 78 per cent, whereas India's was just 52 per cent.

Even today, India's literacy rate, at 74 per cent, is short of where China's was in 1991; meanwhile, China has moved ahead to 94 per cent literacy.

Ditto with life expectancy; China's in 1991 was 70 years

Twenty years later, India had a tally of only 64 years. Of course, China's life expectancy has improved slowly in the last two decades, and is at 73; still, it will take India two decades and more to get to that figure.

Some seemingly large gaps might be closed more quickly. Thus, China's goods exports are about six times India's.

However, India's exports have multiplied nearly seven-fold in the last decade (from $43.8 billion to an expected $300 billion this year), so it could conceivably replicate China's current export figure in less than 10 years.

No such hope can be applied to industry, where too China's is more than six times India's

Move to research, and China has a citation index that is twice as good as India's.

In the space programme, China sent its first man into space in 2003; India hopes to do it in 2015, but is likely to take longer.

As for infrastructure, China has more than 30,000 km of expressways on which traffic speeds go up to 120 kmph; India has a few hundred kilometres.

China has a whole inter-city network of high-speed trains, five times as many Internet users, and nearly a million MW of power generation capacity.

India has only fractionally increased its train speeds since the first Rajdhani Express of 1969, and even if the country doubles power generation capacity every decade, starting from 150,000 MW in 2010, it will take more than a quarter century to get to where China is today.

As for agriculture, China applies fully three times the fertiliser per arable hectare that India does.

The smallest gap is in the mobile phone population. And the largest gap perhaps in the quality of political leadership - China is able to produce a new crop of top-rung leaders every decade, in Beijing and in the provinces and large cities, whereas India's political parties offer little beyond an upper crust.

China's project execution is of course in a league of its own. As for sport, India got one gold medal in the last Olympics, China got 51.

The cold message to all Indians: stop talking of the two countries in the same breath, and dump the "Chindia" coinage.

For why does India not bracket itself with Iran, whose economic size in relation to India (1:4) is broadly the same as India's to China
?


How far is India behind China? - Rediff.com Business
 
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well i would just like to know one thing from you...theres no doubt china is far ahead of india in ALMOST every field....bt temme sumthing....every1 knows china's growth in everythin since past some decades has been exponentially high....today you people are trying to counter the USA which was once considered as the uncrowned king of the world....

is it impossible for india to do so??...dont you notice the difference between condition of india on 26th jan 1950 and 26th jan 2012??...we are optimistic about our future....you are our opponent cum inspiration...wat problem do you have if we talk about india and china in same breath??....if that is the case...go stop iran about USA and Pakistan about India etc etc....grow up...u keep progressing....we will catch up...
 
. . .
one more thing....time keeps changing...something that took 10 years in 70s and 80s might not take that long in 2010s
 
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The debate in a small group earlier this week was about how far India is behind China. The quick numbers tossed out varied all the way from 10 to 25 years and more.

Figuring out the gap between the two "rising giants of Asia" is in fact an instructive study.

For instance, China's GDP in 2011 was $6.99 trillion, or nearly four times India's $1.84 trillion.

If the Indian economy were to grow at an annual average of 7.8 per cent (the rate for the past decade), it would take 18 years to get to China's current size. If growth were to accelerate to nine per cent, it would still take 15 years.

Could India have avoided falling so far behind China?

After all, when China began its Four Modernisations in 1978, the two economies were of roughly the same size ($145-148 billion).

Even in 1991, when India began its reforms, China's economy was only 40 per cent bigger than India's $268 billion.

The answer is that, in many ways, India in 1991 was already two decades and more behind China on key indicators, and it has not closed the gap.

For instance, China's literacy rate in 1991 was 78 per cent, whereas India's was just 52 per cent.

Even today, India's literacy rate, at 74 per cent, is short of where China's was in 1991; meanwhile, China has moved ahead to 94 per cent literacy.

Ditto with life expectancy; China's in 1991 was 70 years

Twenty years later, India had a tally of only 64 years. Of course, China's life expectancy has improved slowly in the last two decades, and is at 73; still, it will take India two decades and more to get to that figure.

Some seemingly large gaps might be closed more quickly. Thus, China's goods exports are about six times India's.

However, India's exports have multiplied nearly seven-fold in the last decade (from $43.8 billion to an expected $300 billion this year), so it could conceivably replicate China's current export figure in less than 10 years.

No such hope can be applied to industry, where too China's is more than six times India's

Move to research, and China has a citation index that is twice as good as India's.

In the space programme, China sent its first man into space in 2003; India hopes to do it in 2015, but is likely to take longer.

As for infrastructure, China has more than 30,000 km of expressways on which traffic speeds go up to 120 kmph; India has a few hundred kilometres.

China has a whole inter-city network of high-speed trains, five times as many Internet users, and nearly a million MW of power generation capacity.

India has only fractionally increased its train speeds since the first Rajdhani Express of 1969, and even if the country doubles power generation capacity every decade, starting from 150,000 MW in 2010, it will take more than a quarter century to get to where China is today.

As for agriculture, China applies fully three times the fertiliser per arable hectare that India does.

The smallest gap is in the mobile phone population. And the largest gap perhaps in the quality of political leadership - China is able to produce a new crop of top-rung leaders every decade, in Beijing and in the provinces and large cities, whereas India's political parties offer little beyond an upper crust.

China's project execution is of course in a league of its own. As for sport, India got one gold medal in the last Olympics, China got 51.

The cold message to all Indians: stop talking of the two countries in the same breath, and dump the "Chindia" coinage.

For why does India not bracket itself with Iran, whose economic size in relation to India (1:4) is broadly the same as India's to China
?


How far is India behind China? - Rediff.com Business
FIRST THEY IGNORE YOU THEN THEY LAUGH AT YOU THEN THEY FIGHT YOU THEN YOU WIN-MAHATMA GANDHI
 
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To all indian poster who attacked the thread starter.

ChinaToday is a very resonal poster, follows is one of his thread.

http://www.defence.pk/forums/world-affairs/153087-why-21st-century-can-well-indias.html

So you indian attacked this thread and hatted up to above one.
It's typical persecution complex, which often can be seen from a weak man or
in this case a person from a country who's people has no confidence to her.
Grow up, boy. Persecution complex can not help you.
 
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To all indian post who attacked the thread starter.

ChinaToday is a very resonal poster, follows is one of his thread.



So you indian attacked this thread and hatted up to above one.
It's typical persecution complex, which often can be seen from a weak man or
in this case a person from a country who's people has no confidence to her.
Grow up, boy. Persecution complex can not help you.

thats the problem with today's world....who speaks matters more than what is being spoken when it should be the other way round...this applies to indian members too
 
. . .
well i would just like to know one thing from you...theres no doubt china is far ahead of india in ALMOST every field....bt temme sumthing....every1 knows china's growth in everythin since past some decades has been exponentially high....today you people are trying to counter the USA which was once considered as the uncrowned king of the world....

is it impossible for india to do so??...dont you notice the difference between condition of india on 26th jan 1950 and 26th jan 2012??...we are optimistic about our future....you are our opponent cum inspiration...wat problem do you have if we talk about india and china in same breath??....if that is the case...go stop iran about USA and Pakistan about India etc etc....grow up...u keep progressing....we will catch up...

If you work hard and the government acts intelligently, nothing is impossible. China is catching up rapidly, India can du that as well!

But there is a difference. When China became a People's Republic and India independent, both were just imaginably far away from the US or any developed European countries, even war-torn Germany in terms of educated populace and learning institutions/infrastructure. IMO China did manage to raise the basic education of the whole nation within a short time, that made the whole difference between the performance of China and India thenceforward.
 
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India is atleast 50-60 years behind china.

we are talking about INDIA and not Somalia or Chad..:P

---------- Post added at 06:46 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:43 PM ----------

Götterdämmerung;2520103 said:
If you work hard and the government acts intelligently, nothing is impossible. China is catching up rapidly, India can du that as well!

But there is a difference. When China became a People's Republic and India independent, both were just imaginably far away from the US or any developed European countries, even war-torn Germany in terms of educated populace and learning institutions/infrastructure. IMO China did manage to raise the basic education of the whole nation within a short time, that made the whole difference between the performance of China and India thenceforward.

exactly...very true...and thats wat india needs to work for...and according to me it is working for it...
 
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Where were you in the 1970 compared to the US you could have never caught up with them but today it is a different story maybe we could do the same.
One thing that I agree with you is that we do need to infuce new blood in to the babu's and then we could make a big difference.
 
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