Chinese-Dragon
RETIRED TTA
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Götterdämmerung;2962347 said:Live and let live.
Fair point. Though this is probably getting beyond the scope of the thread topic.
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Götterdämmerung;2962347 said:Live and let live.
Götterdämmerung;2962347 said:How is 2.5 m gays for a 1.2 billion population the largest gay population in the world. This is statistically impossible because in any given society of the world around 10 % of the male population is either gay or bisexual. The difference is how the 90 % society treats them. I'd rather live in a society where people don't care with whom you share the bed and what you do with that person as long as it's consensual.
Live and let live.
How can the indians rescue their falling rupee?
How is this a cause of concern ONLY for indians?
Why not other countries who have turned a table on this issue like argentina and brazil?
How can the indians rescue their falling rupee?
How is this a cause of concern ONLY for indians?
Why not other countries who have turned a table on this issue like argentina and brazil?
agree to disagree. I am not an expert on this! sorry!
How can the indians rescue their falling rupee? any idea?
Argentina defaulted. Brazil was saved by its vast natural resources. Nothing drops forever. 60 to 62 short term is about right for the rupees. Long term you guys need to invest in human capital and infrastructure and not wait for some other country to do it for you. I keep hearing Indians daydreaming that Japan is going to invest is this or that Indian project. The Japanese are not stupid and have their own problems.
the current populist government has literally kicked investors in their teeth. the only way to stop the sinking ship of the Indian ruppee is to enact tax reforms, reforms in spending, reforms in bureaucratic structure, and reforms in investment.
these 4 things can save the economy. if these four things are addressed, and corruption is rooted out to a lesser level, bureaucracy is transformed and investors pacified, India has the potential to grow at 10-12%
think about it. i am not a fanboy. i have no patriotic blindness. this simple math. with all its problems india grows at 7%. if they are solved even partially a 10% growth is not hard to achieve. as faith returns to the markets, ruppee will stop sliding.
Argentina defaulted. Brazil was saved by its vast natural resources. Nothing drops forever. 60 to 62 short term is about right for the rupees. Long term you guys need to invest in human capital and infrastructure and not wait for some other country to do it for you. I keep hearing Indians daydreaming that Japan is going to invest is this or that Indian project. The Japanese are not stupid and have their own problems.
the sinking of the rupees is happening round the corners. how long will it take just to legislate? let alone putting into practise!
you have tax on capital gains for FIIs that only serve to drive investors away, haven't you?
You have tried to implement tax on retail gold sales but due to the massive protests and strikes, your government scraps the tax policy in a hurry to quell public uproars!
For at least two years in a row, BRIC has, in the words of SGS's Albert Edwards, stood for Bloody Ridiculous Investment Concept, not an acronym for populous emerging markets of Brazil, Russia, India and China as Goldman Sachs' Jim O'Neill saw it ten years ago.
In fact, O'Neill has himself expressed disappointment in India, one of the BRICs, a designation that has boosted foreign investment in India and helped accelerate its economic growth since 2001.
"All four countries have become bigger (economies) than I said they were going to be, even Russia. However there are important structural issues about all four and as we go into the 10-year anniversary, in some ways India is the most disappointing," said O'Neill as quoted by Reuters.
Noting India's significant dependence on foreign capital inflows, Jim O'Neill went further and raised a concern about the potential for current account crisis. "India has the risk of ... if they're not careful, a balance of payments crisis. They shouldn't raise people's hopes of FDI and then in a week say, 'we're only joking'". "India's inability to raise its share of global FDI is very disappointing," he said.
Haq's Musings: Goldman's O'Neill "Disappointed" as India "Explodes"
yes it is indeed a stupid government.
the downside of democracy, is that it is just a fancy way of saying populism.
yet Indian democracy can surprise in time of crisis, as in 1991.
the indian government has become arrogant and lax partly due to the Congress winning a big majority in the general elections.
they assumed that growth is granted and happily reaped the fruits of the past reforms without thinking much about future.
new reforms are needed, fast and furious.
Have you read the book by Edward Luce? He has pointed out the ills of your country succinctly within a book on a place with 1000s years of history!
Democracy is not the panacea for everything! I hope the world has come to realise that. Democracy is not universally applicable to every country!
We have faced crises of far worse nature and have overcome it..So i don't think the present crises is unmanageable for authorities.Btw its funny to see Pakistanis celebrating this as a demise of India while their currency once equal to indian rupee is now 92 PKR per USD and further going down..
i really dont need books to tell me about the good and the bad of my country. my history, my economics, and my social sciences are all good. though I have read the book.
i believe that no single model of government is universally good. in fact i have been thinking of a merito-auto-demo-cratic government lol. a triangle.
ultimately, in the very far future, I believe that governments will have to be abolished. but thats far away. the idea the men needing governing sounds like children needing nannies...