What's new

“India is Seven Times less Relevant than China in the World Economy’

PakShah

FULL MEMBER
Joined
May 21, 2011
Messages
1,563
Reaction score
-1
“India is Seven Times less Relevant than China in the World Economy’


Business Standard | December 2, 2011

Interview with Indira Kannan

Parag Khanna is an Indian-born, New York-based author of the international bestsellers How to Run the World: Charting a Course to the Next Renaissance (2011) and The Second World: Empires and Influence in the New Global Order (2008). Currently, a senior research fellow at the New America Foundation, he has been named one of Esquire magazine’s “75 Most Influential People of the 21st Century”. A frequent speaker on global trends and emerging market strategies, Khanna has also served as a foreign policy advisor to US President Barack Obama for the 2008 election campaign. In this interview, he discusses with Indira Kannan why Bric is “bullshit” and what India needs to do to assert itself on the global stage. Edited excerpts:

kamalnath_charlierose4a_dc_08n.jpg


Are there any lessons India needs to learn from the euro zone crisis?

What we’re seeing in Europe is that markets shape politics and politics shape markets in this incredibly volatile cycle on a daily basis and that can be extremely dangerous. We’ve literally seen two European heads of state replaced by the markets. If India doesn’t do the right things around inflation, for example, there could be consequences. Or corruption. And India is shockingly a country where foreign investment has declined in the last year, which is very rare for most successful emerging markets today. India, obviously, is enjoying enormous macro success in certain ways but it has to worry about some of these fundamental areas of inflation, investment, corruption and so forth, and infrastructure.

Everyone agrees that India needs investment in infrastructure. But with the crisis in Europe and the US economy slowing, where will this investment come from?

GE hasn’t exactly pulled out of India. IBM is actually moving a lot of stuff from China to India as we’ve been hearing because of China’s IP issue. So you know the stronger and more attractive India makes itself, the more it’s going to continue to get FDI [foreign direct investment]. We know that the US government is not able to stop companies from outsourcing, it’s not able to stop globalisation — the benefits are too enormous. India’s been launching PR campaigns around the US and Canada, saying look, we – TCS or Satyam has employed 50 people here and 100 people there – that’s trivial, that’s small potatoes. You need to show fundamentally that US corporations can make enormous profits by producing in India and exporting from India, and it’s Washington’s problem whether or not Washington is able to tax companies and force them to repatriate certain investments.

It’s been 10 years since the term Bric (Brazil, Russia, India and China) was coined by Goldman Sachs economist Jim O’Neill. What’s your assessment of how this group has performed?

I actually have a PowerPoint slide that shows BRIC, CIVETS [Colombia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Egypt, Turkey and South Africa], Next Eleven, BRICSAM [Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, and Mexico] and VISTA [Vietnam, Indonesia, South Africa, Turkey, and Argentina] — and then BULLSHIT pops up. And I’ve given that presentation with Jim O’Neill of Goldman Sachs standing in the room, and he laughed his head off. So I know he doesn’t get too offended. But I mean, it’s complete bullshit. The Brics have absolutely nothing in common in any meaningful sense. They actually have summits now — but only because the media expects them to have summits. Two of the three World War III scenarios involve the Brics, right? And Brazil is part of the West, so its rise helps the West, it doesn’t help China or India. Finally, Russia doesn’t even belong there — it’s a shrinking country, it’s the world’s largest gas station. So I think Bric is just phenomenal marketing, but utterly incoherent and illogical and incongruous.

So where then is India positioned in this new global economy?

India will only matter truly structurally when its share of the global trade and global GDP increases above two per cent, which it hasn’t even really reached. Meanwhile, as you know, China is at 14 per cent. So India is seven times behind China, literally, very measurably — not just perception or Chindia and all of that rubbish conversation, you can measure these things. India is seven times less relevant than China, which is a lot less relevant in the global economy. So it has to increase that share — through trade, through investment and all sorts of things. India needs to take advantage of its geographic position overseeing this huge volume of trans-Indian Ocean trade between West Asia and the Far East, of which it’s also a part. It needs to be influential in the energy markets of Asia, and as it already is, in the demographic and labour markets of West Asia, and also of Asia. People think of India as a great power today not because of nuclear weapons, but because of its companies. This is what will earn it global respectability and it should continue to do that because its companies are professional, trustworthy, have good management and so on.

These are economic strategies. But could they get sidetracked by political challenges?

Economic globalisation has not been sidetracked by political crises. That’s the good news for India, given its geographic position and proximity to huge markets. So the things that can affect India are very much internal — corruption, high youth unemployment, skills gap, poor infrastructure and the fragmentation of politics. I don’t think Pakistan is really a big threat, and I don’t think there needs to be a big destabilising conflict with China although there could be. I don’t think anyone should be waiting for the next Mumbai attack — I think India should be backing the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline but it’s not doing that and so it’s now just an Iran-Pakistan pipeline. That’s too bad. India should not be caving in to US pressure and should be engaging directly with Pakistan and Iran on that gas pipeline.

Is the perception in India that the Bush administration was more strongly pro-India than the Obama administration justified?

Rhetorically, sure, one can say that and everyone has noticed that. But you don’t want to be pro-Bush or pro-Obama. You want the volume of investment from the US to increase, and military, strategic engagement, defence — these are the things you want to continue, it doesn’t matter who is president. It doesn’t matter whether or not he comes to India, whether his speeches mention India or not and if he supports India’s seat on the UNSC [United Nations Security Council ] or not. You have 10, 15 areas of functional cooperation you want to make sure you keep active at all times. And it actually doesn’t matter who is president for those things to continue.

Parag Khanna
 
. .
Don't tell them any facts or numbers, it just makes them upset. :no:

Instead, we should all try to post Indian articles like this:

India 2025: What kind of superpower? - Economic Times (By Anil K Gupta.)

Thanks to its functional institutions of democracy, India will become a very desirable kind of superpower, free of corruption; entrepreneurial and resource and energy efficient, says Anil K Gupta.

Within two decades or less, a rapidly rising India will very likely become the world's third largest economy - after China and the US. It would be appropriate to start speculating now on what kind of a superpower India will be or could be when it becomes one.

Since they so strongly believe in their own awesomeness (regardless of facts), then instead of talking about BBC articles on India being behind Africa, we should all post Indian articles about how India is a shining superpower.
 
.
Don't tell them any facts or numbers, it just makes them upset. :no:

Instead, we should all try to post Indian articles like this:

India 2025: What kind of superpower? - Economic Times



Since they so strongly believe in their own awesomeness (regardless of facts), then instead of talking about BBC articles on India being behind Africa, we should all post Indian articles about how India is a shining superpower.

O dear ,,, you are so obsessed with India...:lol: & alot frustrated also..

& yes Iam awesome :chilli:
 
. .
Interesting fact:

China's economy is bigger than the rest of the BRIC countries combined (Russia, India and Brazil).

India's economy meanwhile, is smaller than Brazil's economy alone.

Very true... OK now what`s bad thing in that???
Chinese economy is bigger or India`s smaller then any one???

Economies gonna grow any how in India & China... we can do nothing to stop it... so Chillll:angel:
 
.
Don't tell them any facts or numbers, it just makes them upset. :no:

Instead, we should all try to post Indian articles like this:

India 2025: What kind of superpower? - Economic Times (By Anil K Gupta.)



Since they so strongly believe in their own awesomeness (regardless of facts), then instead of talking about BBC articles on India being behind Africa, we should all post Indian articles about how India is a shining superpower.

You are right. India indeed has a long way to go and is 7 times less relevant than China. I have no qualms in taking the point. But that indeed does not creat in me any sentiment to allow you bragging rights here. Do not try and bring other anti articles for India in to focus here for further trolling. If that is what you intend to do then go focus on the situation in Wukan. Look how fairly your communist party is treating them there. There is lot for you to look in to your own country till it is what it is and then may be when you are truly free, you could choose to gloat or troll around. Or alternatively, you could do both the things just right now to a Pakistani. Indians have less patience for that propaganda :)

So how is this article?

China villagers in revolt demand dead man's body | World news | The Guardian

Associated Press= BEIJING (AP) — Thousands of residents of a southern Chinese village staging a rare revolt are calling on authorities to return the body of a local representative whose death in police custody helped sparked the rebellion.

The villagers, who have driven local authorities from the area, gathered at a square outside a local temple Saturday to shout slogans calling for the return of farmland they say has been sold to developers without their consent and to urge the central government to intervene, said resident Qin Zhuan, a woman contacted by phone.


"We have been wronged," the villagers chanted, according to Qin. "Long live the central government! Strike down corrupt officials."

The villagers will also hold a march in the village to demand that police return the body of Xue Jinbo, a village representative who died in police custody last Sunday, she said.

Police have set up checkpoints around Wukan, a village of 20,000 that has for months been the site of simmering protests, and have blocked transportation of food in a bid to choke off the weeklong revolt. Since last weekend, villagers have kept police out with barricades made of tree trunks.

Young men are guarding the barricades and patrolling the village roads, sometimes armed with wooden clubs, said Huang Jinqi, another resident reached by phone. Food is smuggled in by other routes, he added.

"Some people from neighboring villages have been bringing us vegetables and rice using the small roads so we are currently all right, there's no need to worry about food," Huang said.

Calls to police in Shanwei, the city that oversees Wukan village, rang unanswered.

Protests against official misconduct are increasingly common in fast-developing China, but Wukan residents have taken things a step further, erecting barricades a week ago to keep police out and posing a challenge to the authoritarian government. On a near-daily basis, thousands of villagers gather for rallies, shouting slogans for the return of their land and pumping their fists in the air.

But signs of a split in the community have emerged in the last couple of days. Protesters estimate that dozens of villagers have joined government supporters who were offering food in exchange for their support. :) Communist party in action :)
 
.

LOL, did you even read that article? :lol: Here, I'll quote a paragraph:

"We have been wronged," the villagers chanted, according to Qin. "Long live the central government! Strike down corrupt officials."

They are supporting the Beijing Government, and pleading with them to sort out the corrupt local officials.

And I agree with them 100%. These corrupt local officials are the scum of the Earth, they should rot in jail for the rest of their lives for what they did.
 
. . .
India has a long way to go before talking of competing with China India hasn't made any great progress in controlling the poverty in India as a matter of fact the divide between rich and poor is increasing in India rather than decreasing

Here, from a neutral Western source:

Comparing India and China: Chasing the dragon | The Economist

The lag in social progress is much longer. A child’s odds of surviving past their fifth birthday are as bad in India today as they were in China in the 1970s.

According to The Economist, India is 40 years behind China in terms of development indicators.
 
.
Interesting fact:

China's economy, is bigger than the rest of the BRIC countries combined (Russia, India and Brazil).

India's economy meanwhile... is smaller than Brazil's alone.

Shocking news of the year.
Thanks for updating pdf .......

---------- Post added at 12:24 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:23 PM ----------

Here, from a neutral Western source:

Comparing India and China: Chasing the dragon | The Economist



According to the Economist, India is 40 years behind China in terms of development indicators.


Again same link......
 
.
And they posted some thread about indian want to compare itself with china. May be this pakshah is false flagger
 
.
China is still a "developing country", and we are still behind much of the world in terms of development indicators.

However, it is nauseating to see the Indians who constantly try to look down on us, despite them being 40 years behind us.
 
.
LOL, did you even read that article? :lol: Here, I'll quote a paragraph:



They are supporting the Beijing Government, and asking them to sort out the corrupt local officials.

And I agree with them 100%. These corrupt local officials are the scum of the Earth.

LoL, poor attempt. Okay also read the following now. They seem to have their own "foreign minister" and there are comments about letting Wukan have its own independence. LoL, you are trying hard on the party line from Beijing. I used to think that you are more humanist and liberal but you are a closet communist :) And good attempt to blame the local party officials. Really, are you trying to say that Beijing is so weak in China even when it takes 50% of the money from all regions? Like I suggested, you can preach this to others here who may be want to spend their lives in China's servitude. For those who are conginitive, this trash does not sell!


A fishing village of about 20,000 people in southern China is in open revolt against the local government a day after it announced the death in police custody of a villager who had led protests over an alleged land grab, according to residents.

Villagers say the man was murdered, but police say he died of a heart attack.

The villagers have forced local officials and police to flee Wukan in the southern province of Guangdong—China's export powerhouse—and have erected barricades to prevent them from re-entering, according to residents.

The police have responded by imposing a blockade on Wukan, stopping food and water from entering, and preventing local fishing boats from heading out to sea, the residents said.

Outside Wukan, life appeared normal with shops and markets open. Police erected a roadblock three or four miles from Wukan and checked cars traveling in both directions. They prevented a Wall Street Journal reporter from entering.

A press officer for the local government denied that any land grab had occurred, although he did acknowledge that villagers were angry over a land issue. He said the local government understood local concerns, and the situation would be resolved either this week or next.

"It will absolutely have a smooth resolution," the official said.

The siege in the prosperous province is one of the most serious recent examples of mass unrest in China, much of it due to local officials misappropriating farmland and selling it to property developers at an enormous profit that farmers never see.

Illegal land seizures—often for golf courses, luxury villas and hotels—are seen by many Chinese and foreign experts as the single biggest threat to the Communist Party as it struggles to maintain legitimacy in a society that is becoming increasingly demanding and well-informed, thanks in large measure to the Internet, even as income disparities widen.

Such land disputes account for 65% of "mass incidents"—the government's euphemism for large protests—in rural areas, according to Yu Jianrong, a professor and expert on rural issues at the state-run Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Mr. Yu estimates that local officials have seized about 16.6 million acres of rural land (more than the entire state of West Virginia) since 1990, depriving farmers of about two trillion yuan ($314 billion) due to the discrepancy between the compensation they receive and the land's real market value.

China's Land Ministry has also warned that misappropriation of farmland has brought the country dangerously close to the so-called red line of 296 million acres of arable land that the government believes it needs to feed China's 1.34 billion people.

The Land Ministry, which uses satellite imagery to spot abuses, launched a fresh crackdown on illegal land use this year, targeting golf courses, hotels and villas in particular, and has announced several high-profile cases in which officials have been punished.

But the central government's attempts to curb such abuses, and to draft new legislation that would protect against land grabs and give farmers a market rate for their land, have met fierce resistance from local authorities who rely on land sales to maintain growth, service debt and top up their budgets.

In 2010 alone, China's local governments raised 2.9 trillion yuan from land sales. And the National Audit Office estimates that 23% of local government debt, which it put at 10.7 trillion yuan in June, depends on land sales for repayment.

In Wukan, Chinese authorities now face a tough choice between sending in more security forces to restore order—and risking serious violence—or negotiating a compromise with the villagers and possibly encouraging copycat protests across the country.

The standoff is particularly risky for Wang Yang, the Communist Party chief of Guangdong, who is vying with other candidates for promotion to the Politburo Standing Committee—the party's top decision-making body—in a once-a-decade leadership change next year.

Mr. Wang launched a "Happy Guangdong" campaign this year, pledging to focus on improving living standards while slowing GDP growth in the province of 104 million people that pioneered China's economic reforms and has long been seen as a bellwether of the country's future.

Anger over land seizures ranks as a top threat to China's leaders
May: Thousands of Mongolian herders protest after a Chinese truck driver runs over and kills a Mongolian herder trying to protect pastureland.
September: Hundreds of people attack local government offices in the village of Wukan in Guangdong province, to protest an alleged land grab.
December: Local police retreat from Wukan and impose a blockade after the death of one villager in police custody prompts big protests. WSJ research


Mr. Wang's campaign has been undermined by a series of high-profile labor and land disputes this year, including riots by hundreds of migrant workers in the cities of Zengcheng and Chaozhou. The rioters attacked government offices and overturned police cars over several days in June.

In China, all urban land is owned by the state, although usage rights can be traded. Farmland belongs to rural collectives, headed by village officials, and usage rights can also be traded, though only for agriculture.

Under Chinese law, local governments can acquire farmland for construction projects that are "in the public interest" in exchange for compensation based on a multiple of the land's agricultural yield, rather than its market value.

In reality, local authorities often hatch those deals secretly with village officials, change the land's status from rural to urban to allow construction, and then sell the land-use rights to property developers at an enormous profit, according to experts in the field.

In such cases, some villagers are typically angered that rights to their land have been sold at all, while others are upset that they are not paid the market value, with most of the profits going to the officials and developers.

"This kind of dispute is very widespread," said Eva Pils, an associate professor of law specializing in land disputes in China at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

"Because people are better connected and better informed, you can sense that there is more radical opposition to what's happening to them," she said. "It's also easier for this kind of protest to spread—and far harder to isolate because information can still travel."

The unrest in Wukan began in September, when villagers attacked local government offices to protest against officials who they said had sold the rights for their land to property developers without providing proper compensation.

Some villagers have said that local officials sold the land to a property developer for as much as one billion yuan and then pocketed about 70% of that.

Local authorities responded at first by sending in riot police, but later tried to negotiate with villagers, asking them to appoint 13 representatives to deal with the government. Those negotiations failed to achieve a compromise, however, and last week men in plainclothes detained some of the 13 representatives, villagers say.

On Tuesday, the local government announced that one of the detained representatives, 42-year-old Xue Jinbo, had died of a cardiac arrest in custody Sunday.

Mr. Xue's relatives believe he was beaten to death, according to villagers. "We lament his death, as he died for us," one villager, who asked to be identified only by his surname, Lin, said in a telephone interview.

He said that Mr. Xue's mother, wife and elder brother had been to see his corpse and had found three fractures, as well as several scars.

China's state-run Xinhua news agency published a report Wednesday quoting a local prosecutor denying that there were any signs of assault on Mr. Xue's body.

Xinhua said Mr. Xue was suspected of having led protests in Wukan in September "regarding issues related to land use, financing and the election of local officials." It said he and other villagers had broken into local government offices and police stations and destroyed six police cars.

Mr. Xue and two others were arrested Friday on suspicion of damaging public property and disrupting public service, it said, quoting a local police official.

He pleaded guilty to the accusations during two interrogations on Friday and Saturday, Xinhua quoted the police official as saying.

A fellow inmate reported that Mr. Xue was ill Sunday, Xinhua quoted the police as saying, and he was immediately taken to a nearby hospital, where he died after 30 minutes of emergency treatment.

The official added that Mr. Xue had a history of asthma and heart disease, according to Xinhua.

A report issued by the forensic medicine center at Zhongshan University in the nearby city of Guangzhou said no serious wounds were found on the body except for a few bruises on his wrists and knees, Xinhua said.

"We assume handcuffs left the marks on his wrists, and his knees were bruised slightly when he knelt," it quoted Luo Bin, deputy chief of the center, as saying.

The escalation of the protest was reported this week by the Daily Telegraph newspaper.

—Kersten Zhang and Olivia Geng in Beijing contributed to this article.
Write to Jeremy Page at jeremy.page@wsj.com

Chinese Village, Police in Standoff Over Villager's Death - WSJ.com
 
.
Back
Top Bottom