What's new

India denies Holbrooke entry

Status
Not open for further replies.
Really ?? two post can make you rich in Indian village?? then why don't you come hre? we don't have a zoo in our villages..:oops: ok jokes apart...yes its true we have imported electricity machinery from China and I think you are still unaware that India Govt. has already decided not to import anymore electricity good from China because of their low quality...it has been realised that it was a mistake to do so..so get alarmed buddy..and please I don't need to tell you that Indians have imported stuff from China in the past because of their cheap prices(even you that why they are cheap)..and you are a nut to say that Indian industry is weak...jst because we import cheap slimming pills from China?:rofl:

No, I go to india 3 times per year, and when I gave 1 dollar to some indian untouchable people in street, they told me they can feed their kids two days with this 1 dollar. Are that guy from your village?:lol:
Are you the PM of india? Stop BS without any src and supporting, the fact is indian still import electrisic machinary and metro and etc.. from china.:lol:
This is an article written by your importer, take a look, what a pity, a country even cant make cleaner.:lol:


---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We Indian has a notion that Chinese produce cheap stuff at cheaper prices. Thats not true, for example, I got quotes for particular vacuum cleaner model from US $ 14 to US $ 41. Same model same specs.

Europeans and american will show more interest in higher end companies, who gives what they specify and Sounth asian people will show interest and still bargain them down to may be $ 12. So they get such product. If you see US $ 41 vacuum cleaner, similar spec vacuum cleaner is sold in India for 4.5-6K under Indian brandname and cheap stuffs are sold in tele marketing.

My Experiance While China Visit. Its Worth Visiting Place - Reliance Mobile (CDMA & GSM) - Discussion Forums
 
.
Ok is it fake watches you make den? Or fake shoes? Seems like a frustrating job.

:rofl: Most The fake shoes and fake watches I made are bought by indian middle class. But I dont think untouchable people in indian can even offer that. Pity.
 
.
Ok is it fake watches you make den? Or fake shoes? Seems like a frustrating job.

hey they can fake every design,they produce maximum m.tech's in reverse engeneering a.k.a copy pasting

they also produce some cheap toys,low quality milk and their medicines,i heard last time nigerian govt dissposed a lot
 
.
:rofl: Most The fake shoes and fake watches I made are bought by indian middle class. But I dont think untouchable people in indian can even offer that. Pity.

the time is gone when we consider some people in india untouchables,now we only consider 1.35 billion people untouchables and they leave neighbouring the eastern part of india:rofl:
 
.
:rofl: Most The fake shoes and fake watches I made are bought by indian middle class. But I dont think untouchable people in indian can even offer that. Pity.

Thats what i am saying , its because of Indian middle class you get your 50 cents everyday.:rofl::rofl:
 
.
Thats what i am saying , its because of Indian middle class you get your 50 cents everyday.:rofl::rofl:

:rofl: I am a very kind man, I told this to many indian under poverty line and starving to death, they are very pleased to do this job.:rofl: Bcoz they can become a rich man in his village.
 
.
the time is gone when we consider some people in india untouchables,now we only consider 1.35 billion people untouchables and they leave neighbouring the eastern part of india:rofl:

Are you a high caste man? Have you even talked with a untouchable?:lol: World most poor county. what a pity.
 
.
Thats what i am saying , its because of Indian middle class you get your 50 cents everyday.:rofl::rofl:

it seems due to us chinese r not starving like before,to those whom their govt dont throw 50 cent we can throw some 10 cent atleast:rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
.
:rofl: I am a very kind man, I told this to many indian under poverty line and starving to death, they are very pleased to do this job.:rofl: Bcoz they can become a rich man in his village.

Like how your 50 cents made you the richest in your village?
Good work boy , keep the bags coming!!!:rofl::rofl:
 
. .
No, I go to india 3 times per year, and when I gave 1 dollar to some indian untouchable people in street, they told me they can feed their kids two days with this 1 dollar. Are that guy from your village?:lol:
Are you the PM of india? Stop BS without any src and supporting, the fact is indian still import electrisic machinary and metro and etc.. from china.:lol:
This is an article written by your importer, take a look, what a pity, a country even cant make cleaner.:lol:

How many days a year do you work for this 50/post job buddy that you come to India 3 times a year to give your hard earned money online to some begger in India? You think next time you come to India to give some money to begger please disclose your identity as Chinese..believe me the begger in India don't touch Chinese..:rofl:


---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We Indian has a notion that Chinese produce cheap stuff at cheaper prices. Thats not true, for example, I got quotes for particular vacuum cleaner model from US $ 14 to US $ 41. Same model same specs.

Europeans and american will show more interest in higher end companies, who gives what they specify and Sounth asian people will show interest and still bargain them down to may be $ 12. So they get such product. If you see US $ 41 vacuum cleaner, similar spec vacuum cleaner is sold in India for 4.5-6K under Indian brandname and cheap stuffs are sold in tele marketing.

My Experiance While China Visit. Its Worth Visiting Place - Reliance Mobile (CDMA & GSM) - Discussion Forums

SHANGHAI — The Chinese quality regulator said Wednesday that nearly a fifth of the food and consumer products it checked in a nationwide survey this year were found to be substandard or tainted.

The broad sampling of foods, agricultural tools, clothing, women's and children's products and other types of goods turned up sizable quality and safety failure rates for products that are sold to Chinese consumers.

The government said, for instance, that canned and preserved fruit and dried fish contained excessive bacteria; that 20 percent of the fruit and vegetable juice inspected was deemed substandard and that some children's products were defective or laced with harmful chemicals.

The announcement came amid a growing scandal over the quality and safety of Chinese-made exports, and follows a series of international recalls involving everything from contaminated pet food ingredients and counterfeit toothpaste to toxic toys, defective tires and contaminated seafood.

The General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine said the survey, which was conducted in the first half of 2007, showed quality and safety improvements over the past year. But the announcement also suggested that Chinese consumers are at serious risk of being harmed by purchasing tainted foods, substandard goods and suspect or defective equipment.

Regulators said, in effect, that goods sold in China are far more hazardous than the exports that are driving the country's economic growth and are now partly the subject of safety and quality debates.

"Ninety-nine percent of the food exported to the United States was up to safety standards over the past two years, which is a very high percentage," Li Yuanping, a regulatory official, told the state-run Xinhua press agency this month.

But regulators in the United States, Europe and other countries are growing increasingly concerned about quality and safety failures involving Chinese-made goods.

Last week, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said it would block certain types of Chinese seafood, including shrimp, eel and catfish, from entering the country, unless the products were certified to be safe. American regulators say they had to act after a sharp rise this year in the number of seafood products contaminated with carcinogens or excessive antibiotics residues.

Facing a storm of criticism, China has repeatedly defended the quality and safety of its food and the goods it exports. But regulators have also moved to crack down on fake and poor-quality foods and consumer products.

Nearly every week for the past several months, the government and China's state-controlled media have provided more evidence of how widespread the quality and safety problems are in this country, despite signs of major progress in many areas.

During the past month, regulators and quality inspectors say they have discovered candied fruit with 63 times the permitted amount of sweetener, and excessive additives and preservatives in nearly 40 percent of the children's snacks surveyed in western Guangxi Province. They said they have uncovered fake human blood protein at hospitals and seized food tainted with formaldehyde, illegal dyes and industrial wax.

Last week, the government even said it had shut about 180 food factories nationwide because of food safety violations. From December 2006 to May 2007, regulators said, they uncovered 23,000 cases involving fake or low-quality food.

Experts say aggressive and opportunistic entrepreneurs continue to take advantage of the country's chronically weak enforcement of regulations, choosing to blend fake ingredients into products; to sign contracts agreeing to sell one thing only to later switch the raw materials for something cheaper; and to doctor, adulterate or even color foods to make them look fresher or more appetizing, when, in fact, they could be old and stale.

In its report released Wednesday, the government said 80.9 percent of the food and other products checked in a nationwide survey met safety standards, and that this rate was higher than a year earlier, when about 78 percent of the good surveyed were deemed safe.

The government said that more than 3,000 types of food had been checked nationwide and that thousands of companies were examined. But regulators offered few details about why certain goods failed the standards or how dangerous the products might be.

The government did, however, say that baby formula and baby clothing did not meet the safety standards; that animal feed, fertilizer and agricultural equipment was defective; and that many food items were mislabeled or heavily colored by additives.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/04/business/worldbusiness/04iht-food.5.6497264.html

and if you want you can also go through this link to find out how many Chinese producst have been recalled by the western importers all round the year..and they are the same people whom you proudly put infront of us as the testimony of your product quality...

Dangerous Made-In-China Products: 2007 Timeline : Who Sucks

:wave:
 
.
How many days a year do you work for this 50/post job buddy that you come to India 3 times a year to give your hard earned money online to some begger in India? You think next time you come to India to give some money to begger please disclose your identity as Chinese..believe me the begger in India don't touch Chinese..:rofl:

I feel very sorry to you, at least we have food and cloth, we dont starve to death. But Look at you. Have a fun, do you wanna more? Just tell me, I would like give you article, pics and video to you. BTW: The low quality product is prepeared for indian importer, and I think the untouchable indian are very happy to use it, bcoz wihtout this products they can even live.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

There is nothing more basic in terms of human necessities than the adequate availability of roti, kapra aur makaan. Going beyond these bare essentials of food, clothing and housing, one can add sanitation, health care and education. Let's examine how the two biggest nations in South Asia are coping with such fundamental necessities of their population:

1. Food:

Food is the most basic necessity of all. In terms of being better fed, Pakistanis consume significantly more dairy products, sugar, wheat, meat, eggs and poultry on a per capita basis than Indians, according to FAO data. Average Pakistani gets about 50% of daily calories from non-food-grain sources versus 33% for average Indians.

There is widespread hunger and malnutrition in all parts of India. India ranks 66th on the 2008 Global Hunger Index of 88 countries while Pakistan is slightly better at 61 and Bangladesh slightly worse at 70. The first India State Hunger Index (Ishi) report in 2008 found that Madhya Pradesh had the most severe level of hunger in India, comparable to Chad and Ethiopia. Four states — Punjab, Kerala, Haryana and Assam — fell in the 'serious' category. "Affluent" Gujarat, 13th on the Indian list is below Haiti, ranked 69. The authors said India's poor performance was primarily due to its relatively high levels of child malnutrition and under-nourishment resulting from calorie deficient diets.

Last year, Indian Planning Commission member Syeda Hameed acknowledged that India is worse than Bangladesh and Pakistan when it comes to nourishment and is showing little improvement.

Speaking at a conference on "Malnutrition an emergency: what it costs the nation", she said even Prime Minister Manmohan Singh during interactions with the Planning Commission has described malnourishment as the "blackest mark".

"I should not compare. But countries like Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka are better," she said. The conference was organized last year by the Confederation of Indian Industry and the Ministry of Development of Northeastern Region.

According to India's Family Health Survey, almost 46 percent of children under the age of three are undernourished - an improvement of just one percent in the last seven years. This is only a shade better than Sub-Saharan Africa where about 35 percent of children are malnourished.

India has recently been described as a "nutritional weakling" by a British report.

2. Clothing:

According to Werner International, Pakistan's per capita consumption of textile fibers is about 4 Kg versus 2.8 Kg for India. Global average is 6.8 Kg and the industrialized countries' average consumption is 17 Kg per person per per year.

3. Shelter:

There is widespread homelessness in India, with a population 7 times larger than Pakistan's, with the urgent need for 72 million housing units. Pakistan, too, has a housing crisis and needs about 7 million additional housing units, according to the data presented at the World Bank Regional Conference on Housing last year.

4. Sanitation:

India might be an emerging economic power, but it is way behind Pakistan, Bangladesh and even Afghanistan in providing basic sanitation facilities, a key reason behind the death of 2.1 million children under five in the country.

Lizette Burgers, chief of water and environment sanitation of the Unicef, recently said India is making progress in providing sanitation but it lags behind most of the other countries in South Asia. A former Indian minister Mr Raghuvansh Prasad Singh told the BBC that more than 65% of India's rural population defecated in the open, along roadsides, railway tracks and fields, generating huge amounts of excrement every day.

As an example, let's compare India's largest slum Dharavi with Pakistan's Orangi Town. The fact is that Orangi is nothing like Dharavi in terms of the quality of its housing or the services available to its residents. While Dharavi has only one toilet per 1440 residents and most of its residents use Mahim Creek, a local river, for urination and defecation, Orangi has an elaborate sanitation system built by its citizens. Under Orangi Pilot Project's guidance, between 1981 and 1993 Orangi residents installed sewers serving 72,070 of 94,122 houses. To achieve this, community members spent more than US$2 million of their own money, and OPP invested about US$150,000 in research and extension of new technologies. Orangi pilot project has been admired widely for its work with urban poor.

5. Healthcare:

A basic indicator of healthcare is access to physicians. There are 80 doctors per 100,000 population in Pakistan versus 60 in India, according to the World Health Organization. For comparison with the developed world, the US and Europe have over 250 physicians per 100,000 people. UNDP recently reported that life expectancy at birth in Pakistan is 66.2 years versus India's 63.4 years.

Access to healhcare in South Asia, particularly due to the wide gender gap, presents a huge challenge, and it requires greater focus to ensure improvement in human resources. Though the life expectancy has increased to 66.2 years in Pakistan and 63.4 years in India, it is still low relative to the rest of the world. The infant mortality rate remains stubbornly high, particular in Pakistan, though it has come down down from 76 per 1000 live births in 2003 to 65 in 2009. With 320 mothers dying per 100,000 live births in Pakistan and 450 in India, the maternal mortality rate in South Asia is very high, according to UNICEF.

6. Education:

India's literacy rate of 61% is well ahead of Pakistan's 50% rate. In higher education, six Indian universities have made the list of the top 400 universities published by Times Higher Education Supplement this year. Only one Pakistani university was considered worthy of such honor.

Pakistan has consistently scored lower on the HDI sub-index on education than its overall HDI index. It is obvious from the UNDP report and other sources that Pakistan's dismal record in enrolling and educating its young people, particularly girls, stands in the way of any significant positive development in the nation. The recent announcement of a new education policy that calls for more than doubling the education spending from about 3% to 7% of GDP is a step in the right direction. However, money alone will not solve the deep-seated problems of poor access to education, rampant corruption and the ghost schools that only exist on paper, that have simply lined the pockets of corrupt politicians and officials. Any additional money allocated must be part of a broader push for transparent and effective delivery of useful education to save the people from the curses of poverty, ignorance and extremism which are seriously hurting the nation.

In spite of deficiency in education, how is it that Pakistanis can maintain better standards of living in terms of food, clothing, shelter, sanitation and healthcare than their neighbor India? The first answer is that, according to the 2009 UN Human and Income Poverty Report, the people living under $1.25 a day in India is 41.6 percent, about twice as much as Pakistan's 22.6 percent. The second answer can be found in the fact that Pakistanis' real per capita incomes are actually higher than reported by various agencies. The most recent real per capita income data was calculated and reported by Asian Development Bank based on a detailed study of a list of around 800 household and nonhousehold products in 2005 and early 2006 to compare real purchasing power for ADB's trans-national income comparison program (ICP). The ICP concluded that Pakistan had the highest per capita income at HK$ 13,528 among the largest nations in South Asia. It reported India’s per capita as HK $12,090.

Conclusion:

Clearly, the status of an average Indian is not only worse than an average Pakistani's, the abject deprivation in India is comparable to the nations in sub-Saharan Africa. However, Pakistanis do need to worry about their woefully inadequate state of education and literacy. They must find a way to develop the skills, grow the economy and create opportunities for their growing young population. As Pakistan's former finance minister Salman Shah recently told the wall Street Journal, "Pakistan has to be part of globalization or you end up with Talibanization. Until we put these (Pakistan's) young people into industrialization and services, and off-farm work, they will drift into this negative extremism; there is nothing worse than not having a job." Unless Pakistanis heed Shah's advice, there is real danger that Pakistan will slip into total chaos and violence, endangering the entire nation in the foreseeable future.

To summarize, this post has discussed six different indicators of life in any nation: Availability of food, clothing, shelter, sanitation, health care and education. The published data that I have shared with you shows that PAKISTAN IS AHEAD OF INDIA IN FIVE OF THE SIX INDICATORS. In education, however, Pakistan is marginally behind India, which itself suffers from low levels of literacy and wide gender gap resulting in very poor showing on the UNDP HDI this year, and in prior years. In spite of heavy visa restrictions and quotas imposed by many nations around the world, about a million Indians manage to leave India in search of a better life. In fact, India dropped six places on the world rankings from a low of 128 to an even lower 134. Unfortunately, Pakistan has also slipped three ranks on the list, down from 138 to 141, mainly due to its deficit in literacy and gender discrimination.

Haq's Musings: Food, Clothing and Shelter in India and Pakistan
 
.
I feel very sorry to you, at least we have food and cloth, we dont starve to death. But Look at you. Have a fun, do you wanna more? Just tell me, I would like give you article, pics and video to you.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

There is nothing more basic in terms of human necessities than the adequate availability of roti, kapra aur makaan. Going beyond these bare essentials of food, clothing and housing, one can add sanitation, health care and education. Let's examine how the two biggest nations in South Asia are coping with such fundamental necessities of their population:

1. Food:

Food is the most basic necessity of all. In terms of being better fed, Pakistanis consume significantly more dairy products, sugar, wheat, meat, eggs and poultry on a per capita basis than Indians, according to FAO data. Average Pakistani gets about 50% of daily calories from non-food-grain sources versus 33% for average Indians.

There is widespread hunger and malnutrition in all parts of India. India ranks 66th on the 2008 Global Hunger Index of 88 countries while Pakistan is slightly better at 61 and Bangladesh slightly worse at 70. The first India State Hunger Index (Ishi) report in 2008 found that Madhya Pradesh had the most severe level of hunger in India, comparable to Chad and Ethiopia. Four states — Punjab, Kerala, Haryana and Assam — fell in the 'serious' category. "Affluent" Gujarat, 13th on the Indian list is below Haiti, ranked 69. The authors said India's poor performance was primarily due to its relatively high levels of child malnutrition and under-nourishment resulting from calorie deficient diets.

Last year, Indian Planning Commission member Syeda Hameed acknowledged that India is worse than Bangladesh and Pakistan when it comes to nourishment and is showing little improvement.

Speaking at a conference on "Malnutrition an emergency: what it costs the nation", she said even Prime Minister Manmohan Singh during interactions with the Planning Commission has described malnourishment as the "blackest mark".

"I should not compare. But countries like Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka are better," she said. The conference was organized last year by the Confederation of Indian Industry and the Ministry of Development of Northeastern Region.

According to India's Family Health Survey, almost 46 percent of children under the age of three are undernourished - an improvement of just one percent in the last seven years. This is only a shade better than Sub-Saharan Africa where about 35 percent of children are malnourished.

India has recently been described as a "nutritional weakling" by a British report.

2. Clothing:

According to Werner International, Pakistan's per capita consumption of textile fibers is about 4 Kg versus 2.8 Kg for India. Global average is 6.8 Kg and the industrialized countries' average consumption is 17 Kg per person per per year.

3. Shelter:

There is widespread homelessness in India, with a population 7 times larger than Pakistan's, with the urgent need for 72 million housing units. Pakistan, too, has a housing crisis and needs about 7 million additional housing units, according to the data presented at the World Bank Regional Conference on Housing last year.

4. Sanitation:

India might be an emerging economic power, but it is way behind Pakistan, Bangladesh and even Afghanistan in providing basic sanitation facilities, a key reason behind the death of 2.1 million children under five in the country.

Lizette Burgers, chief of water and environment sanitation of the Unicef, recently said India is making progress in providing sanitation but it lags behind most of the other countries in South Asia. A former Indian minister Mr Raghuvansh Prasad Singh told the BBC that more than 65% of India's rural population defecated in the open, along roadsides, railway tracks and fields, generating huge amounts of excrement every day.

As an example, let's compare India's largest slum Dharavi with Pakistan's Orangi Town. The fact is that Orangi is nothing like Dharavi in terms of the quality of its housing or the services available to its residents. While Dharavi has only one toilet per 1440 residents and most of its residents use Mahim Creek, a local river, for urination and defecation, Orangi has an elaborate sanitation system built by its citizens. Under Orangi Pilot Project's guidance, between 1981 and 1993 Orangi residents installed sewers serving 72,070 of 94,122 houses. To achieve this, community members spent more than US$2 million of their own money, and OPP invested about US$150,000 in research and extension of new technologies. Orangi pilot project has been admired widely for its work with urban poor.

5. Healthcare:

A basic indicator of healthcare is access to physicians. There are 80 doctors per 100,000 population in Pakistan versus 60 in India, according to the World Health Organization. For comparison with the developed world, the US and Europe have over 250 physicians per 100,000 people. UNDP recently reported that life expectancy at birth in Pakistan is 66.2 years versus India's 63.4 years.

Access to healhcare in South Asia, particularly due to the wide gender gap, presents a huge challenge, and it requires greater focus to ensure improvement in human resources. Though the life expectancy has increased to 66.2 years in Pakistan and 63.4 years in India, it is still low relative to the rest of the world. The infant mortality rate remains stubbornly high, particular in Pakistan, though it has come down down from 76 per 1000 live births in 2003 to 65 in 2009. With 320 mothers dying per 100,000 live births in Pakistan and 450 in India, the maternal mortality rate in South Asia is very high, according to UNICEF.

6. Education:

India's literacy rate of 61% is well ahead of Pakistan's 50% rate. In higher education, six Indian universities have made the list of the top 400 universities published by Times Higher Education Supplement this year. Only one Pakistani university was considered worthy of such honor.

Pakistan has consistently scored lower on the HDI sub-index on education than its overall HDI index. It is obvious from the UNDP report and other sources that Pakistan's dismal record in enrolling and educating its young people, particularly girls, stands in the way of any significant positive development in the nation. The recent announcement of a new education policy that calls for more than doubling the education spending from about 3% to 7% of GDP is a step in the right direction. However, money alone will not solve the deep-seated problems of poor access to education, rampant corruption and the ghost schools that only exist on paper, that have simply lined the pockets of corrupt politicians and officials. Any additional money allocated must be part of a broader push for transparent and effective delivery of useful education to save the people from the curses of poverty, ignorance and extremism which are seriously hurting the nation.

In spite of deficiency in education, how is it that Pakistanis can maintain better standards of living in terms of food, clothing, shelter, sanitation and healthcare than their neighbor India? The first answer is that, according to the 2009 UN Human and Income Poverty Report, the people living under $1.25 a day in India is 41.6 percent, about twice as much as Pakistan's 22.6 percent. The second answer can be found in the fact that Pakistanis' real per capita incomes are actually higher than reported by various agencies. The most recent real per capita income data was calculated and reported by Asian Development Bank based on a detailed study of a list of around 800 household and nonhousehold products in 2005 and early 2006 to compare real purchasing power for ADB's trans-national income comparison program (ICP). The ICP concluded that Pakistan had the highest per capita income at HK$ 13,528 among the largest nations in South Asia. It reported India’s per capita as HK $12,090.

Conclusion:

Clearly, the status of an average Indian is not only worse than an average Pakistani's, the abject deprivation in India is comparable to the nations in sub-Saharan Africa. However, Pakistanis do need to worry about their woefully inadequate state of education and literacy. They must find a way to develop the skills, grow the economy and create opportunities for their growing young population. As Pakistan's former finance minister Salman Shah recently told the wall Street Journal, "Pakistan has to be part of globalization or you end up with Talibanization. Until we put these (Pakistan's) young people into industrialization and services, and off-farm work, they will drift into this negative extremism; there is nothing worse than not having a job." Unless Pakistanis heed Shah's advice, there is real danger that Pakistan will slip into total chaos and violence, endangering the entire nation in the foreseeable future.

To summarize, this post has discussed six different indicators of life in any nation: Availability of food, clothing, shelter, sanitation, health care and education. The published data that I have shared with you shows that PAKISTAN IS AHEAD OF INDIA IN FIVE OF THE SIX INDICATORS. In education, however, Pakistan is marginally behind India, which itself suffers from low levels of literacy and wide gender gap resulting in very poor showing on the UNDP HDI this year, and in prior years. In spite of heavy visa restrictions and quotas imposed by many nations around the world, about a million Indians manage to leave India in search of a better life. In fact, India dropped six places on the world rankings from a low of 128 to an even lower 134. Unfortunately, Pakistan has also slipped three ranks on the list, down from 138 to 141, mainly due to its deficit in literacy and gender discrimination.

Haq's Musings: Food, Clothing and Shelter in India and Pakistan

hey now that looks funny chinese also started to idolize haq's mussing:rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl:

the anti india attitude is definily on the rise

hey guys whenever someone is complaining abt u,that means u r definitly making progress:victory:
 
.
Listen Buddy all those counting the reserves of minerals talk does not change much!

Listen Buddy, if you want to counter an argument please do so in a way that makes sense and addresses all the points made originally. Your subjective judgement on what "changes much" and what doesn't does not constitute a counter-argument with any merit.

The point is simple, even if you see the number of american or western companies in Pakistan is only limited to the domestic potential for the lack of indigenous ones or pro western policy in business.

What are you trying to say? You will have to resolve the grammatical issues above in order for me to comprehend what your point is.

Not saying that this cannot change in the future but for the moment that is the case. But definitely once pak's economy is on the rise you will have investments too. But every country has specific comparative advantages and I am sure u guys have them too.

On the other hand India is churning out big contracts and right now playing a catching up game with China in terms of the money invested. The population of India is the very reason for so much boom as well cos the consumer base is just too BIG and given Industries are just starting to come up there is a huge potential going forward, so as of now US companies or companies around the globe have vested interest in India and we all know Multinationals run pretty much government policies in their home countries!
:cheers:

So by the argument above, if China were to pose an either-or argument to multinationals, they would all abandon India since it is the smaller and poorer market? China is going to outspend India in a massive way in the foreseeable future, so that would mean that China will be able to force multinationals in the US to change US policy against India?

The views you espouse are incredibly simplistic and fail to take into account the many factors that determine national policies.

You also highly overestimate the importance of India's supposed spending; take the military budget, for example, what does the US spend in Afghanistan and what is India's entire defence budget? So which interest do you think defence contractors in the US are more interested in protecting? Pakistan is a huge factor in what goes down in Afghanistan.

China's aviation spending alone will involve the purchase of over 2,200 airliners in the coming years. How does this contrast with India's spending?

Afghanistan presents a hundred billion dollar plus contracting and rebuilding opportunity for US companies in the near term. Pakistan is the most key ingredient that can enable this transformation to occur.

You fail to account for all the above, so I am sorry, I can't give much credence to your views. :pakistan:
 
.
Status
Not open for further replies.

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom