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India to catch up with China? Stop deluding yourselves!

Watch the videos of driving around in Shanghai. How long will it take for Mumbai to catch up with Shanghai of today? Any thoughts?



The first video is from South-North Elevated Road to Yan'an Elevated Road
The second one on Yan'an Elevated Road crossing the river tunnel

@Shotgunner51 @GS Zhou
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Watch the videos of driving around in Shanghai. How long will it take for Mumbai to catch up with Shanghai of today? Any thoughts?



Roads in Shanghai are not as great as in many cities such as Shenzhen, Nanning, Guiyang, Xiamen....
Shanghai is history!

One avenue in Nanning City in 2008, Western China.
Sorry, @GS Zhou @Shotgunner51
 
The first video is from South-North Elevated Road to Yan'an Elevated Road
The second one on Yan'an Elevated Road crossing the river tunnel

@Shotgunner51 @GS Zhou
View attachment 342325



Roads in Shanghai are not as great as in many cities such as Shenzhen, Nanning, Guiyang, Xiamen....
Shanghai is history!

One avenue in Nanning City in 2008, Western China.
Sorry, @GS Zhou @Shotgunner51


Can't comment on others, but we do have good expressways, many of them.

 
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We do have good expressways

Pls do not underestimate cities in Western China!!!
Such expressway is not your patent!!!
I only speak for interior China.

Yunnan City, Southwest China.


Look at their roads, look at their city!
When 2000+km Shanghai-Kunming HSR opens in this December, pls have a visit there from your hometown Shanghai!



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never say never ! what was china 25 years back ? see the photos of shanghai 25 years back , it looks like an indian city ,so there is always hope
I'm born in Shanghai. I've lived in this city for more than 30 years. During my childhood, EVERY family, every, poor or rich, has access to tap water and electricity, and also a toilet to use.
 
no problem. I hope one day Shanghai could be downgraded to the least developed city in China!! :yahoo:
You are on this way!!!
My city has higher GDP per capita than you. 8-)

Look at this one-hour video of Chongqing Municipality in Western China.
Every corner, every district, county and town have been well documented.
And it was in 2011!
The 2016 version will be released soon!
Aren't you people in Shanghai jealous? :rofl:
@Lure @Götterdämmerung @Kaptaan @Gibbs @Malik Abdullah @TopCat @Devil Soul
 
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mumbai is not only about slums , yes there are huge sprawl of slums but there is also other side of mumbai , slowly but surely slums are decreasing through cluster redevelopment . but still this depicts the huge income inequality in india , we have a long way to go
To me, the biggest issue to Mumbai is extremely high real estate price vs. extremely bad infrastructure (I've been in Mumbai twice, so I know how bad the infrastructure is). I have to say Mumbai's real estate price today is even higher than that in Shanghai. High real-estate price makes any large-scale infrastructure building almost impossible.
 
I'm born in Shanghai. I've lived in this city for more than 30 years. During my childhood, EVERY family, every, poor or rich, has access to tap water and electricity, and also a toilet to use.
They are always in delusion.....
I live in interior of China...
We have never had the problem of electricity, pipeline gas, tap water......
Why, no matter they or you Shanghai People, are So obsessed with Shanghai???

You guys lag behind from us!
Look at this new HSR station set to open in December in Southwest China!

Look at the HSR station in my city!

Shanghai should work harder!!!
 
Better in some places for sure, but those places make up a tiny proportion of Mumbai. The rest of the city is a sea of slum shacks.

1375266686mumbai-slums.jpg




Watch this video to see for yourself. Indian cities, including Mumbai, are absolutely some of the most disgusting, filthy, and dysfunctional the world by a large margin.

Really I am ashamed brother..but tell me is it wrong to aspire to catch up with a developed country?isn't constantly getting improved part of human evolution?why are you so hateful of india and indians?
 
Really I am ashamed brother..but tell me is it wrong to aspire to catch up with a developed country?isn't constantly getting improved part of human evolution?why are you so hateful of india and indians?

Because he's an inferiority complex-ridden Pakistani. ;)
 
India's problem is their social and political structure. The country is deeply religious and people are divided by hierarchy. Regional interest is very often being put above the national interest and the political parties are fractional which stops the country from forming a long term consistent development plan. This nation is just so different from East Asian regions and countries like China, Japan, Korea, Hong Kong ,Taiwan and Singapore . East Asian development mode will never happen in India, because of the fundamental difference between the two cultures.
 
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India's problem is their social and political structure. The country is deeply religious and people are divided by hierarchy. Regional interest is very often being put above the national interest and the political parties are fractional which stops the country from forming a long term consistent development plan. This nation is just so different from East Asian regions and countries like China, Japan, Korea, Hong Kong ,Taiwan and Singapore . East Asian development mode will never happen in India, because of the fundamental difference between the two cultures.
You can't change their cultural gene...
Their gene decides what a country is like.
 
Nobody said we are catching up :lol:
But the Chinese will leave you Americans way behind :enjoy:
 
Our Indian friends here should all read this... When theories meet reality, theories always lose.

http://chinabizgov.blogspot.com/2011/12/will-india-challenge-china-not-yet.html

Will India Challenge China? Not yet.
Last month my wife and I took our first ever trip to India. Since that time I have struggled to put into words what I learned on our trip – not only about India, but also about China. Since today is the last day of 2011, I have determined that my latest thinking on this topic, however crudely formed at this point, is going up on the blog today.


India Gate, Delhi


So what does China have to do with India? More importantly, you may be asking, how could one hope to learn anything about China by visiting a completely different country?

Why India?

Aside from the fact that I thought India would be an interesting place to visit, I had begun to notice over the past year news stories, blog posts and twitter discussions about whether India would ever challenge China economically, militarily and/or diplomatically.

One book I read earlier in 2011 was Robert Kaplan's Monsoon, a fascinating historical approach to explaining why the Indian Ocean will become the world's most contested region, and how China and India are already competing for influence. (Kaplan also leads the reader to wonder a.) whether the US understands the importance of this region and b.) even if the US gets it, whether the US will have either the will or the ability to maintain its influence.)

The question of whether China's influence in the region will increase is no longer contested, but many people – including some long-time China watchers such as me – see India as a potentially credible rival to China. India has a large land mass, the world's second largest population and an economy that has consistently turned in upper-single digit economic growth for most of the past two decades. India and China also share a long and contested border, with both countries occupying lands claimed by the other, and as a result, the level of trust between the two has always been fairly low.

Regardless of whether India could become a credible rival, it is easy to see that many of the necessary ingredients for a rivalry are there. And given what I know about China – that it fully intends to return to its historical role as regional (if not global) hegemon – I wanted to see for myself whether India might truly be on the cusp of challenging China's ambitions.

So why might I have expected to learn anything about China while in India? Perhaps it is because China is the first country in which I ever spent significant time abroad. Ever since the mid-'90s, every other country I have visited has further illuminated my view of China.

Since 2000, when my employer sent me to Japan for a couple of years, I have viewed China slightly differently. To give but one small example, having been a waiter in college, I had always thought that service in China was poor because no one tipped in restaurants. After my first dinner in Japan, not only was I amazed by the friendly and efficient service, but also by the fact that the Japanese don't tip in restaurants either. There was clearly a much deeper cultural or sociological explanation for the disparity in service levels between China and Japan.

Will India challenge China?

So, back to the first burning question that drove me to India, the question of whether India will be a credible rival to China. The short answer to this question, I am disappointed to admit, is no – certainly not in the near future, and not without China self-destructing from the inside.

As thrilled as we were to have arrived at the clean new terminal of Delhi Airport, my wife and I were simply dumbstruck by the the poverty, filth and chaos we witnessed during the hour-long ride to our hotel. Delhi makes Beijing look clean and orderly by comparison (a fact that cannot have been lost on any Chinese leaders who have visited India). And while I reserved judgment on that first day, the remainder of the two weeks we spent in India further confirmed that India is not quite ready for prime time.


Chandni Chowk Bazaar


This is not to say that India has no hope at all, but a lot of what I saw on the ground, combined with what one may easily learn about politics in India by reading the news, leaves me to believe that India has much further to go if it ever hopes to catch up with China. I simply never imagined India's overall development gap with China would be so wide.

I also came away from India with a new level of appreciation and respect for the accomplishments of China. While I don't believe China's accomplishments excuse the lack of personal freedoms and rampant abuses of human rights, one cannot help but admire the speed with which China has pulled itself out of a deep hole of poverty.

Traveling in India and China

Traveling in China, while having improved quite a bit over the past two decades is still a bit of a grind, and in some areas it has become worse. When there were fewer people traveling by air back in the '90s, there were also far fewer unexplained flight delays than there are now.

That said, we found traveling in India to be even more difficult. Travel agencies and airline ticket offices tend to close on Sundays so if an emergency arises (say, for example, one gets food poisoning – don't ask me how I know about this) and you need to change your travel plans, just be sure it doesn't happen on a Sunday. (Apparently the planes do still fly on Sunday.)

Also, trains in India are apparently affected by fog. The day we left Delhi for Agra, our train was two hours late, which actually wasn't bad considering many trains were as much as six or seven hours late that day.


New Delhi Train Station


This connection between train travel and weather would not have occurred to me, but apparently train engineers in India need to have a certain distance of visibility before a train can travel. Having traveled on trains in China in all kinds of weather, I don't think this is the case there, though I could be wrong. I mean, if all trains follow their appointed schedules, and all trains are connected via radio to each other and to a central dispatch, avoiding collisions shouldn't be rocket science.

Of course, one can easily avoid the hassles of air and train travel by hiring a car and driver, but it can be quite expensive, particularly if it is arranged by your hotel, which (as we later realized) has no problem doubling the price of the car for their own profit.

Corruption

And in terms of scams and general corruption, I used to think the Chinese were masters at cheating foreigners, but they have nothing on the Indians I encountered on the tourist track. By comparison, the Chinese are rank amateurs. At every turn – particularly in north India, but less so in the south – we encountered people who, on the pretense of being friendly and inquisitive, wanted nothing more than to separate us from our money while providing nothing of value in return.


A market in central New Delhi. Where were all the women?


In all fairness, I must emphasize that these people were gathered in massive numbers around the areas frequented by tourists. Because we did not really experience the everyday lives of average Indian citizens, I cannot comment on whether such corruption affects their lives to a similar degree. However, if the many Bollywood movies I have watched are any indication, perhaps the corruption for the average Indian is just as bad though taking on different forms.

But you should go to India anyway...

While my post thus far has focused on some of our negative experiences in India, the truth is that my wife and I loved India. The amazing sights we saw, the outstanding food we ate, and the smart and honest people whom we encountered along the way combined to make the whole experience worthwhile.

If you have ever considered traveling to India just to see the sights, we can attest that it is absolutely worth the effort. (And this comes from a couple who have seen many of the amazing sights that China, Vietnam, Japan and California have to offer.) Though we were disappointed to find our view of the Taj Mahal completely obscured by pea-soup fog, this in no way diminished our experiences in seeing the Qutb Minar, Humayun's Tomb, the Red Fort, Agra Fort and the Amber Fort near Jaipur, among others.


The Taj Mahal (It's back there somewhere.)


We also experienced fantastic service aboard a kettuvallam boat on the backwaters of Kerala while dining on outstanding Kerala cuisine and learning about the lives of the people who farm and fish in the area. And probably our best experience was at a farm homestay near Kochi where we enjoyed the warm hospitality of a world-wise Syrian Christian family and engaging conversation around the family dinner table.


The crew on our kettuvallam cruise, Lake Vembanad, Kerala


All of this should come as no surprise to anyone who has traveled to more than a handful of foreign countries. The world is a big place, and every country has both its pluses and minuses. While I still have yet to visit most of the world's countries, in every country I have visited, I have discovered uniquenesses that make my travels worthwhile. And though India did not live up to my (unreasonable) expectations, I have no regrets for having visited, and I will most certainly return. (While I was able to touch the Taj Mahal, I still have yet to see it!)

Evolving views on India vs China

This has been a difficult blog post for me to write, if for no other reason than that I really, really wanted India to be the credible rival that China needs to have in Asia. Also, since returning from India, my wife and I both have found that our views are evolving as we continue to ruminate over our experiences there and compare them to our experiences elsewhere.

And I must also emphasize that this does not arise from a desire to “keep China down” as China's media often likes to claim whenever foreigners disagree with China's government. As I stated before, I have an even greater appreciation for China's accomplishments to date. Yet at the same time, it is somewhat unnerving to the free world that a big, powerful country such as China may have figured out a way to build prosperity without personal freedoms (note the emphasis on “may”). It makes many people uncomfortable that this kind of government aspires to regional hegemony and world leadership.

I would argue that no one really has a desire to “keep China down,” but that many do have a desire to keep authoritarianism down. If China were to demonstrate its concern for human rights, few would have a problem with its asserting influence around the world. (Though one might argue the same for the United States.)

And this is precisely why my hopes for India were so high. I very much wanted to see for myself that a democratically-led government could provide for its citizens both freedom and economic prosperity, and act as a counterweight to the other big country in the region that only wants to provide the latter. But what I saw is that, similar to America, India's prosperity is limited to a small sliver at the very top of society. The middle class experience stagnation while the poor are just trying to keep their heads above water.

It would be easy to blame democracy for the disparity between China and India, but I believe that is too simplistic of an answer. (Naturally, this is the lesson that China's leaders will choose to take from their own comparisons with India.) There are many other differences between China and India that cannot be ruled out as factors affecting the countries' trajectories of development.

The most obvious difference is demographic. Whereas China is quite homogeneous, India is a patchwork of ethnicities, religions and languages. Without going into too much detail, I can only say that it is a surprise to me that India has remained a cohesive unit since 1947. The fact that it didn't break into dozens of rival states is a testament of the determination of independent India's first leader Jawaharlal Nehru. Love him or hate him, one cannot deny that he laid the foundation for modern India – both good and bad.

Since this blog post is already far longer than most people will bother to read, I will end it here and simply note that my thinking on this topic is far from complete. Scholars far more brilliant than I have tackled this topic of comparative modernization, and have yet to produce anything more than hypotheses (some more plausible than others).

The one thing I know, however, is that I will most certainly spend time in both India and China again in the future. I see great value in understanding both countries and how their political systems affect the lives of real people.

Happy 2012, everyone!
 
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