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India Nowhere at Davos: Thank god for that!

I don't get it. If India is going down why are the Chinese so concerned about that? Right? :whistle: When they keep bragging that their economy is 4 times of Indian economy then what fear do they have? I guess they are just scared they will lose the top economy in Asia title soon cause of falling and ageing manpower. :P :wave:

The story is actually positive about India, saying Davos is a contrarian indicator
That famous 11% functional Literacy again.
 
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You will qualify for the bottom of those test too, China gained only because companies in US setup their manufacturing in China. They designed everything then taught you how to copy paste. You gained because u provided cheap labor and land. Read how much kids are paid in IPhone manufacture.

China did a hundred things India couldn't do to attract foreign capital. India labour is at least 50% cheaper and yet nobody cares nor comes.
 
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first implement advice on yourself, China doing well does not mean every Chinese is great.

It is easier to deliver in dictatorship where u can crush dissent. The true success story of world is US, China's story was driven by foreigner setting up plants for them, giving them machine, without that China would not be China....

India is a primitive factor driven economy that's inferior when the Mughals ruled India.

There is little of value in India except cheap call center labor and 7 year olds being forced to break rocks and haul dirt on construction sites.
 
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China did a hundred things India couldn't do to attract foreign capital. India labour is at least 50% cheaper and yet nobody cares nor comes.

Yeah, we can not operate like Foxconn do, Sorry!!
 
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Yeah, we can not operate like Foxconn do, Sorry!!

Yes, it takes roads, electricity and an educated work force. Instead you choose to send a million slaves to build pyramids for Arab Pharoahs.
FOXCONN would be HEAVEN FOR THOSE MODERN SLAVES.
 
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There is little of value in India except cheap call center labor and 7 year olds being forced to break rocks and haul dirt on construction sites.

One, important thing to know - No work is Cheap. There are call centers in China too and to your astonishment Child labor abuse too.. ;)

---------- Post added at 11:22 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:20 PM ----------

Yes, it takes roads, electricity and an educated work force. Instead you choose to send a million slaves to build pyramids for Arab Pharoahs.
FOXCONN would be HEAVEN FOR THOSE MODERN SLAVES.

Really, we really did.. I am not even aware of that part of our history. On the contrary, I know a lot about how Chini slaves built American Rail network System. :azn:
 
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One, important thing to know - No work is Cheap. There are call centers in China too and to your astonishment Child labor abuse too..

---------- Post added at 11:22 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:20 PM ----------



Really, we really did.. I am not even aware of that part of our history. On the contrary, I know a lot about how Chini slaves built American Rail network System.

You want to compare 1860 California Chinese whose descendents all go to Berkeley with 2012 Dubai slaves with their passport confiscated?? Really??
 
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India still a foreign investment hot spot - E&Y - Yahoo! India Finance

By Henry Foy
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Foreign direct investment in India is set to swell in coming years as investors stomach a lack of transparency, poor infrastructure and policy paralysis in their search for growth, professional services firm Ernst & Young (E&Y) said in a report.
Overseas investment in Asia's third-largest economy rose for the first time in three years in 2011, the report noted, as global investors put their faith in rising salaries, an expanding middle-class and a large and cheap labour force.
"The fundamentals that make India attractive to investors remain intact," Farokh T. Balsara, head of markets at Ernst & Young India, wrote in the report released on Sunday.
"However, our respondents continue to cite inadequate infrastructure and a lack of governance and transparency as major obstacles to investment."
Foreign direct investment (NYSE:FDI - NewsFDInull) in India rose 13 percent to $50.81 billion in the first 11 months of 2011 from a year earlier, while the total number of projects rose 25 percent to 864, the report said, citing data from the Financial Times' FDI Intelligence service.
For graphic on E&Y's India attractiveness survey see:
http://link.reuters.com/ruk36s
For graphic on India's GDP and industrial output see:
http://link.reuters.com/wys35s
Business confidence in India has declined over the past year, as economic growth slowed from an annual rate of 8.5 percent in 2010/11 to about 7 percent, and corruption and policy paralysis discouraged investment in big projects.
Just over half of chief executives in India are still "very confident" of revenue growth in the next 12 months, down from 88 percent a year ago, according to a recent survey by PricewaterhouseCoopers.
The majority of companies surveyed by E&Y were confident in the long-term prospects for investment in India, given sluggish growth in the United States and debt problems in Europe.
Almost 70 percent of 382 international companies surveyed said they plan to increase or maintain their operations in India, said the report, which was prepared for the World Economic Forum gathering in Davos, Switzerland.
Just 19 percent said they had no plans to enter the country or were preparing to withdraw.
Robust domestic demand, cost competitiveness and a cheap, ever-growing labour force were cited India's key benefits.
"Although the ongoing global uncertainty...(has) prompted some discomfort among global investors to make long-term commitments, India's inherent advantages and its proven resilience to counter macroeconomic challenges far outweigh these concerns," Balsara said.
Automakers led the way in investing in India last year, boosting spending by 46 percent, E&Y said.
Technology and life sciences companies were other big spenders, while spending by foreign companies on infrastructure and retail projects declined.
Ford Motor Co, which said this month it would spend $142 million on its Indian operations, and the Renault-Nissan alliance are among companies that are stepping up investment in India.
Other companies, particularly retailers, are not so sure.
Sweden's IKEA, the world's biggest furniture retailer, said this week that would be difficult to set up shop in India because of complex government sourcing rules announced this month.
Plans by companies such as Wal-Mart were set back in December when the government, under pressure from political allies, abandoned a long-mooted policy to open up the supermarket sector to direct investment by foreign companies.
(Editing by Ted Kerr)

---------- Post added at 10:07 AM ---------- Previous post was at 10:06 AM ----------

India still a foreign investment hot spot - E&Y - Yahoo! India Finance

By Henry Foy
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Foreign direct investment in India is set to swell in coming years as investors stomach a lack of transparency, poor infrastructure and policy paralysis in their search for growth, professional services firm Ernst & Young (E&Y) said in a report.
Overseas investment in Asia's third-largest economy rose for the first time in three years in 2011, the report noted, as global investors put their faith in rising salaries, an expanding middle-class and a large and cheap labour force.
"The fundamentals that make India attractive to investors remain intact," Farokh T. Balsara, head of markets at Ernst & Young India, wrote in the report released on Sunday.
"However, our respondents continue to cite inadequate infrastructure and a lack of governance and transparency as major obstacles to investment."
Foreign direct investment (NYSE:FDI - NewsFDInull) in India rose 13 percent to $50.81 billion in the first 11 months of 2011 from a year earlier, while the total number of projects rose 25 percent to 864, the report said, citing data from the Financial Times' FDI Intelligence service.
For graphic on E&Y's India attractiveness survey see:
http://link.reuters.com/ruk36s
For graphic on India's GDP and industrial output see:
http://link.reuters.com/wys35s
Business confidence in India has declined over the past year, as economic growth slowed from an annual rate of 8.5 percent in 2010/11 to about 7 percent, and corruption and policy paralysis discouraged investment in big projects.
Just over half of chief executives in India are still "very confident" of revenue growth in the next 12 months, down from 88 percent a year ago, according to a recent survey by PricewaterhouseCoopers.
The majority of companies surveyed by E&Y were confident in the long-term prospects for investment in India, given sluggish growth in the United States and debt problems in Europe.
Almost 70 percent of 382 international companies surveyed said they plan to increase or maintain their operations in India, said the report, which was prepared for the World Economic Forum gathering in Davos, Switzerland.
Just 19 percent said they had no plans to enter the country or were preparing to withdraw.
Robust domestic demand, cost competitiveness and a cheap, ever-growing labour force were cited India's key benefits.
"Although the ongoing global uncertainty...(has) prompted some discomfort among global investors to make long-term commitments, India's inherent advantages and its proven resilience to counter macroeconomic challenges far outweigh these concerns," Balsara said.
Automakers led the way in investing in India last year, boosting spending by 46 percent, E&Y said.
Technology and life sciences companies were other big spenders, while spending by foreign companies on infrastructure and retail projects declined.
Ford Motor Co, which said this month it would spend $142 million on its Indian operations, and the Renault-Nissan alliance are among companies that are stepping up investment in India.
Other companies, particularly retailers, are not so sure.
Sweden's IKEA, the world's biggest furniture retailer, said this week that would be difficult to set up shop in India because of complex government sourcing rules announced this month.
Plans by companies such as Wal-Mart were set back in December when the government, under pressure from political allies, abandoned a long-mooted policy to open up the supermarket sector to direct investment by foreign companies.
(Editing by Ted Kerr)
 
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Any economic news thats bad about India gives massive orgasms to the guys posting here. Typical.
 
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In the mean time , while trolling continues, china growth to drop to 8.5% in 2012
China growth to slow in 2012, rate cut likely: OECD | Reuters

UN pegs india growth rate to 7.7% in 2012
UN report pegs India growth at 7.7% in 2012, 7.9% in 2013 - Hindustan Times

And while that alkhaid guy talks about hindu growth rate , pakistan remains at muslim growth rate of 3.8%. Expect that to be lower , i doubt they foresee foreign investers being kidnapped and shot.military coups , osama raids , drone attacks ,bomb blasts while predicting growth raids
Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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gulfnews : Gujarat is emerging as India's Detroit

Ahmedabad: In the middle of a strike at Maruti Suzuki's main factory that would cost India's largest carmaker $500 million (Dh1.83 billion) in lost production, the company negotiated a deal to invest $1 billion in new facilities on the subcontinent.

It was an unusual move, but — despite the troubles it and many other companies have had in India — Maruti was confident its new plant would roll out on time and without any hitches, for one reason: it will be built in the western state of Gujarat.

Ever since Tata Motors was unceremoniously ousted from the eastern state of West Bengal in 2008 over a land dispute, and successfully relocated to Gujarat, the state — and its controversial chief minister, Narendra Modi — have become known for their business-friendly, anti-union environment and emerged as India's answer to Detroit of the US.

"The main reason is because of the initiatives that have been undertaken by the chief minister," says Yaresh Kothari, auto analyst for Angel Broking. "He has been very proactive about inviting industrialists to the state and offering them quick access to land, which has become a major problem in the country."
 
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