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India Fades

NeutralCitizen

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It was only last summer that the Indian government forecast that the economy would grow at an annual rate of 9.0% to 9.5% for the next half-decade. So it came as a shock Thursday when new data revealed the economy slowed to a 5.3% annual clip in the January-March quarter. After a decade of rising incomes, this feels like a recession, but it could give the Congress Party a much needed kick in the pants to restart reforms.

India's growth prospects have been fading for some time. Multinationals are walking away from the country, withdrawing some $10.7 billion worth of investments in 2011 alone, according to Nomura. Manufacturing contracted by 0.3% for the year that ended March 31. Agriculture and services faltered as well.

Yet Congress, in power since 2004, has governed as if it could continue to divide the spoils of growth without spoiling the growth itself. It used windfall tax gains to go on a welfare-spending binge. This year, it raised service and excise taxes, but refused to cut fuel subsidies. It is now set to tax corporations retroactively on cross border deals. It also aggressively sought to enforce dubious "tax avoidance" rules, though it shelved this plan last month.

Delhi managed to keep the party going after the 2008 financial crisis with more government spending and easier credit. But that only postponed the reckoning—while sending the inflation rate north of 8% for the better part of the last two years.

After growth dipped below 7% late last year, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh turned to gimmicks, like having state-owned Coal India boost coal supply to power producers in a one-off manner or proposing to set up special manufacturing zones where factories would get tax breaks. But businesses want less red tape permanently, especially when it comes to energy investments, as well as labor reform to make hiring and firing easier. On both fronts, the Prime Minister has done nothing.

Then there was his one serious attempt at reform. In late November he announced plans to allow foreign investment in big-box retail stores. The reform would have been a boon for consumers, and would have helped import some crucial supply-chain know how. But the reform met the usual combination of populist and special-interest resistance, and the government folded in 10 short days.

Indians are increasingly disenchanted with Congress's failure to push for pro-market reforms, and have voted accordingly in recent state elections. That's the good news. There's been a lot of talk about India's emergence as a new economic superpower. An India with the ambition to rise in the world will not treat a high-growth economy as a national birthright.
 
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It was only last summer that the Indian government forecast that the economy would grow at an annual rate of 9.0% to 9.5% for the next half-decade. So it came as a shock Thursday when new data revealed the economy slowed to a 5.3% annual clip in the January-March quarter.

What big-mouth boasting, even the Chinese government never sets a growth target of 9%.

They should feel lucky that they are even getting 5.3%.

S&P downgraded India for poor economic fundamentals (huge fiscal and trade deficit). And with the additional collapse of the Rupee, things look like they are going to be much worse for India.
 
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yes,boasting is an indian tradition.
They even boast of things that not yet happened.

Their favourite boast: 36% of NASA employees are Indian. :rofl:

Unfortunately for them, it turned out to be a hoax.

Indian Govt falls victim to net hoax - Times Of India

WASHINGTON: It's an Internet myth that has taken on a life of its own. No matter how often you slay this phony legend, it keeps popping up again like some hydra-headed beast.

But on Monday, the Indian government itself consecrated the oft-circulated fiction as fact in Parliament, possibly laying itself open to a breach of privilege. By relaying to Rajya Sabha members (as reported in The Times of India) a host of unsubstantiated and inflated figures about Indian professionals in US, the government also made a laughing stock of itself.

The figures provided by the Minister of State for Human Resource Development Purandeshwari included claims that 38 per cent of doctors in US are Indians, as are 36 per cent of NASA scientists and 34 per cent of Microsoft employees.

There is no survey that establishes these numbers, and absent a government clarification, it appears that the figures come from a shop-worn Internet chain mail that has been in circulation for many years. Spam has finally found its way into the Indian parliament dressed up as fact.

Attempts by this correspondent over the years to authenticate the figures have shown that it is exaggerated, and even false. Both Microsoft and NASA say they don't keep an ethnic headcount.
 
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Their favourite boast: 36% of NASA employees are Indian. :rofl:

Unfortunately for them, it turned out to be a hoax.

Indian Govt falls victim to net hoax - Times Of India



:lol:


Indian boy tops Nasa examination
By Sutapa Mukerjee
BBC News, Ballia, Uttar Pradesh

Saurabh came top of 200,000 students worldwide
A 17-year-old boy from an obscure village in northern India's Uttar Pradesh state has topped an international exam run by Nasa.
Saurabh Singh beat 200,000 students worldwide to top the prestigious International Scientist Discovery exam conducted by the National Aeronautical and Space Administration.

The other two Indians who passed the exam are President APJ Kalam and the late Nasa astronaut, Kalpana Chawla.

President Kalam was seventh in 1960 and Chawla 21st in 1988.

Dingy study

Now politicians, administrators, social workers and teachers are all vying to fete the boy from Ballia district.

"All this attention is so funny," says reticent Saurabh.

His study is a dingy corner in a dilapidated house

Saurabh's feat is all the more impressive because he hails from a backward district, with few passable roads and irregular electricity, in one of India's poorest states.

His father is a teacher while his mother is a health worker with the local government.

:D

India unveils $10 laptop!
Mohammed Siddique in Hyderabad | February 03, 2009 21:03 IST

sak_shat.jpg


The 'world's cheapest laptop', developed in India, was unveiled by Union Minister for Human Resources Development Arjun Singh at the Tirupati temple on Tuesday evening.

The laptop, jointly developed by several organisations, such as the University Grants Commission, the Indian Institute of Technology-Madras, and the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, will be priced at around $10 to $20 (about Rs 500 to Rs 1,000), officials said.

S K Sinha, joint secretary in the ministry for education, giving a demonstration of the device which is smaller than the normal laptop, said that it will need some more fine-tuning. He said the laptop is expected to reach the market in about six months.

*ttp://www.rediff.com/money/2009/feb/03india-unveils-10-dollar-laptop.htm
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