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India isn't going to become China just by magic

beijingwalker

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India isn't going to become China just by magic
Mihir Sharma
APR 11 2019, 14:28PM

There’s one clear favourite in the world’s biggest election, which kicks off in India today and runs for six weeks: incumbent Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Buoyed by his personal popularity, Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party isn’t even pretending to offer dramatic new programs if it returns to power. Its election manifesto, released earlier this week, was a relatively uninspiring document -- a few populist promises to Indian mixed in with a heavy dollop of hyper-nationalism.

What it did contain was a long list of claims about Modi’s record over the past five years. There was a faint but unmistakable tinge of smugness. A few more years of what we’ve just had, the message was, and India would be a developed nation.

Don’t blame Modi and the BJP: This sort of unearned confidence is characteristic of Indian expectations of the future. In 2019, however, such confidence is dangerously misleading. While the country does have a huge population and is currently the fastest-growing big economy in the world, its rise to superpower status is hardly guaranteed.

The uncomfortable reality is that unless India changes a great deal about itself -- and fast -- it’s in danger of never performing to its potential. Indeed, its chances of becoming the sort of country that can provide a decent life to all its citizens are rapidly declining with every year that it puts off much-needed reforms.

Modi wisely began his term with talk of “Make in India,” his shorthand for reviving India’s anemic manufacturing sector. That task has been left undone because it would have required fundamental changes to how labour and land are regulated in India -- reforms that demanded too much political capital. There’s little mention of the program in the BJP’s new manifesto.

If India delays much longer, it will miss the chance to generate mass manufacturing jobs entirely. Already, new factories employ far fewer people than they used to: Making things is no longer solely about cheap wages and the competitive edge possessed by countries such as India is fast eroding.

The next few years are crucial. If India can pick up some of the manufacturing work that’s becoming available because of rising costs in China and trade tensions with the U.S., it could make up for lost time. What it can’t do is lean back and assume that an industrial policy based on import substitution will spur the creation of manufacturing jobs. India needs to make for the world, not just its own supposedly “huge” market. (Remember, two-thirds of its consumers are still unable to afford more than the basics, which is why companies focused on bottom-of-the-pyramid buyers such as Walmart Inc. are the most interested in India.) For that to happen, the country needs to create a far more competitive environment than it has to date.

Then there’s the question of India’s workforce. Analysts are already worrying that India’s demographic dividend -- its vast pool of young people -- will become a curse: Without jobs, all those young people could drag down the country instead of pushing it towards upper-middle income status. The problem is that they are desperately short of preparation for both the old economy and the new.

India has done well over the past decade or so to get most of its children into school. It has done less well at getting them to learn anything. Too many students are left behind; overworked and under-motivated teachers, poor incentives and botched government policy have ensured that educational outcomes are among the poorest in the world.

You can’t create a nation of digital entrepreneurs when too many of your graduates struggle to add at a primary-school level. Indeed, you won’t even be able to build a skilled manufacturing workforce. The economist Karthik Muralidharan at the University of California, San Diego has argued that India needs a “universal numeracy mission,” focused on ensuring that all children can at least do third-grade mathematics. This doesn’t seem like much or even enough, but it would be an essential start.

Many of these changes need to be implemented as soon as possible if they are to have a meaningful impact on Indian development over the critical next few decades. But, there’s simply no sense of urgency in New Delhi. The smugness that one can detect in the BJP’s manifesto is only one indication of this complacency. Too many of us in India seem to believe that the future is inevitably ours -- that a few more highways and a few tax concessions will be sufficient for India to replicate China’s path to power and affluence.

Nothing could be further from the truth. No country has a right to become rich. Unfortunately, we in India seem to believe that it is not only our right, it is our sacred destiny. And so we’re not willing to put in the work needed to get there.

https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/india-isnt-going-to-become-china-just-by-magic-728128.html
 
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If we go by the numbers Indian economy during Q1 of 2019 is 3.2 Trillion USD.

Nominal GDP - India stands 12 years behind.
China 2007 = 3.2-3.4 trillion
India 2019= 3.2 trillion

PPP GDP - India is where China was 10 years ago.
China 2009 = 11.4 trillion
India 2019 = 11.3 trillion

Overall, India has a lot of catching up to do. India is moving towards an investment driven growth but we can't expect India to repeat Chinese miracle. India will take its own slow and steady path.
 
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If we go by the numbers Indian economy during Q1 of 2019 is 3.2 Trillion USD.

Nominal GDP - India stands 12 years behind.
China 2007 = 3.2-3.4 trillion
India 2019= 3.2 trillion

PPP GDP - India is where China was 10 years ago.
China 2009 = 11.4 trillion
India 2019 = 11.3 trillion

Overall, India has a lot of catching up to do. India is moving towards an investment driven growth but we can't expect India to repeat Chinese miracle. India will take its own slow and steady path.
In 2007-2009 China was already the world number one industrial nation and manufacturing nation, one of the top nations in trade and the biggest foreign reserve holder. China already produced and consumed one third to half of the world major raw material, Chinese products had already domniated the world market and China already had comprehensive bases arcoss all indutries, military, car manufacturing, shipbuilding, machne making, electronics....China's infrastructure was already close to the world best.
India now is nowhere close to what China had achieved by 2007-2009.
 
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If we go by the numbers Indian economy during Q1 of 2019 is 3.2 Trillion USD.

Nominal GDP - India stands 12 years behind.
China 2007 = 3.2-3.4 trillion
India 2019= 3.2 trillion

PPP GDP - India is where China was 10 years ago.
China 2009 = 11.4 trillion
India 2019 = 11.3 trillion

Overall, India has a lot of catching up to do. India is moving towards an investment driven growth but we can't expect India to repeat Chinese miracle. India will take its own slow and steady path.

But No Toilets :hitwall:
 
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If we go by the numbers Indian economy during Q1 of 2019 is 3.2 Trillion USD.

Nominal GDP - India stands 12 years behind.
China 2007 = 3.2-3.4 trillion
India 2019= 3.2 trillion

PPP GDP - India is where China was 10 years ago.
China 2009 = 11.4 trillion
India 2019 = 11.3 trillion

Overall, India has a lot of catching up to do. India is moving towards an investment driven growth but we can't expect India to repeat Chinese miracle. India will take its own slow and steady path.

These numbers didnt let india fight with small neighbour in china its alot more peace than india. South West East and North have coas in india poverty line is like hard to draw population is going to grow crazily every wants to go out of india like a only wish or every one who lives in india. yes it look 12 years only but believe me its not less than 50 years ... a nation who trying to build fighter jet from 35 years and yet to finish it lol ..
 
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it look 12 years only but believe me its not less than 50 years ... a nation who trying to build fighter jet from 35 years and yet to finish it lol ..
Maybe never if India fails to make itself a manufacturing powerhouse and becomes a major global exporter thus builds up it's foreigner reserves for future investments. All east Asian countries followed the same pattern, Japan, Korea, Chinese Taiwan, HongKong and Singapore , India can't get around it, there are no alternatives for this.
 
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If we go by the numbers Indian economy during Q1 of 2019 is 3.2 Trillion USD.

Nominal GDP - India stands 12 years behind.
China 2007 = 3.2-3.4 trillion
India 2019= 3.2 trillion

PPP GDP - India is where China was 10 years ago.
China 2009 = 11.4 trillion
India 2019 = 11.3 trillion

Overall, India has a lot of catching up to do. India is moving towards an investment driven growth but we can't expect India to repeat Chinese miracle. India will take its own slow and steady path.

Believe you are ethnic Indian. This kind of comparison can bring Nigeria to South Korean level within 20 years.

In 1960 - 70, many SSA countries were richer than South Korean, so they must have been as rich as Japan today.

The problem is that Indian will never have Chinese work ethic, as Nigerian will never have South Korean work ethnic. China in 2002, with nominal GDP of around $1 trillions and per capita of less than $1,000, was already far more advanced than many countries with per capita higher than $10,000. Their cities, even in border area, was modern, clean and civilized.

And nominal India GDP in 2018 is only $2,716 trillions. It cannot reach $3.2 trillions just in Q1 (even multiply by 4), as rupee is depreciated.
 
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