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Corruption is endemic in South Asia. From a critical standpoint, I think the reason the perception about corruption is better in India is because of the overall mood of the country which perceives things to be getting better and that also includes perceptions about corruption.
I have to tell you that Pakistanis are probably the most negative of all South Asians when it comes to the running of their country. I have a relative of whom I always ask the same question, so how are things in your neck of the woods (even though I am in and out all the time) and his answer is perpetually negative despite the massive development and him being very well off (after retiring from PIA).
So perceptions are one thing which can simply be based off stories that one has heard about supposed corruption and off you go labeling the country as very corrupt (not saying we do not have this problem, however its certainly no better or no worse than India, BD etc. in my opinion).
New Recruit
The Bandra Worli Sea Link is an 8-lane, cable-stayed bridge with pre-stressed concrete viaduct approaches, which will link Bandra and the western suburbs of Mumbai with Worli and central Mumbai, and is the first phase of the proposed West Island Freeway system. The Rs. 1600 crore project of Maharashtra State Road Development Corporation (MSRDC) is being executed by Hindustan Construction Company. Designs and Project management is by M/s DAR Consultants. Although expected to have been completed by December 2008, after a long delay of 5 years, construction is still underway. The bridge is now slated to be inaugurated on June 30. The Sea Link will enable speedy travel between Bandra and Worli, cutting travel times from 60–75 minutes to 7 minutes.
New Recruit
Very well said Sir, Pakistanis have to be the most negative people in the world. I know soo many people who act like this, even though they are prospering but they cant stop being negative. Just last week i met an old relative for dinner; he simply couldnt shut up about how bad business is in Lahore but did say proudly that he bought a new Signus.
come on,man ,in a moden country,who have they right to kick any of it's citizens out of their own country.Hitler had done that.Yes that was wat needed (affirmative action) to bring about parity among backward indegenous people and chinese and Indians, so the civil war ended and brough prosperity for all the citizens. Now they are again reviewing those laws and reforming where it needed. That is how it should be.
PS: Nobody kicked any Chinese or Indians out of Malaysia and till this day Chinese are the most affluent people of Malaysia.
Sri Lanka May Become ?Hong Kong of India? After War (Update2) - Bloomberg.com
Sri Lankas economy can bounce back from its weakest growth in six years and become the Hong Kong of India as the end of almost three decades of civil war boosts business opportunities, HSBC Private Bank said.
Decades of fighting on the Indian Ocean island shackled its $32 billion economy, which according to figures released yesterday expanded 1.5 percent last quarter from a year earlier as the global recession intensified the slowdown. Ports, retailers, apparel and tea exporters could lead a recovery after the Tamil Tiger rebels were defeated last month.
The rebound will be spectacular, said Arjuna Mahendran, the Singapore-based chief investment strategist for Asia at HSBC Private Bank, which oversees $494 billion in assets. To start with, Sri Lankas location gives its port a natural advantage.
Sri Lanka could benefit from its proximity to India, just as Hong Kong profits from being a trade hub to China. Sri Lanka lies 31 kilometers (19 miles) south east of India, the worlds second-fastest-growing major economy.
Seventy percent of the volume handled by the Colombo port is trans-shipment of goods imported by India and this could be increased because Indian ports dont have adequate depth, Mahendran said. Sri Lanka has embarked upon a plan to quadruple capacity at the Colombo port in three years.
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam were defeated on May 16, ending their 26-year struggle for a separate homeland in Sri Lanka. The Tigers, who controlled a third of the country at one point, fell swiftly since January as the Sri Lankan military launched an unprecedented offensive to wipe them out.
Lot of Potential
Its something you never expected to happen when you have lived most of your life under the specter of war, said Otara Gunewardene, who runs Odel, Sri Lankas biggest department store. Its unbelievable. I see things differently now and see a lot of potential for growth.
Odel plans to sell a stake in the company to overseas investors and spend $20 million to add another 70,000 square feet to its flagship store in Colombo and open new outlets in other cities in the country.
We fought terrorism and now the economic war has to be fought, said Malik Fernando, whose family owns Dilmah Tea Co., among the best-known Ceylon tea brands in the world. For manufacturers, the cost of doing business is very high because infrastructure, like roads and power, was neglected because of the war.
Small Economy
Dilmah, for example, operates a bus service in Colombo to pick up their workers from home because we know that if they use the public transport, they are going to be late, fagged out and stressed, Fernando said.
Still, Sri Lanka can be turned around quickly as it is a small economy and Dilmah is exploring options to expand in the hotels and tourism business, Fernando added. John Keells Holdings Ltd., the islands biggest diversified company, said it sees opportunities to grow in all its businesses from property development to banking and insurance.
Tea exporters could also benefit from a 30 percent surge in prices this year while the worldwide recession hasnt sapped demand for the high-end lingerie and apparels the nation sells overseas, HSBCs Mahendran said.
Sri Lanka, which receives about 500,000 tourists each year, aims to increase that number by at least 20 percent annually through a global campaign entitled Small Miracle, said Dileep Mudadeniya, managing director of the Sri Lanka Tourism Promotion Bureau.
More Tourists
The war discouraged travelers from the U.S. and Europe for years from visiting the teardrop-shaped tropical island.
Occupancy rates have been 40 percent in the past two years in Colombos five-star hotels, which have a combined capacity of 2,000 rooms, said Jerome Auvity, general manager at Hilton Colombo. As a result, the average room tariff is about $62 a night, he said.
There is no immediate reaction suggesting business is rising, Auvity said. Give it another six months to see whether confidence returns to Sri Lankas leisure market. There is still this dark cloud, this debate and issue regarding the displaced people.
The final battles have left about 300,000 people displaced and living in more than 40 camps across the northern part of the country. President Mahinda Rajapaksa said last month he intends to resettle them in the region within 180 days.
Still, the Board of Investment of Sri Lanka expects foreign direct investments to quadruple to $4 billion by 2012, led by investments in ports, tourism, telecommunication and textiles.
Foreign Investment
We have been getting encouraging responses from foreign investors, said Dhammika Perera, chairman of the Board. We expect three leading hotel chains to sign an investment agreement with us in about three months.
Sri Lankas economic growth can accelerate almost four times the current pace to 6 percent by 2010, says Prakriti Sofat, an economist at HSBC Holdings Plc. in Singapore. Citigroup Inc. economist Anushka Shah expects growth at 5.7 percent next year.
The nations benchmark stock index, the Colombo All-Share Index, surged 3.1 percent to 2416.02 at close of trade today, the most since the week the war ended, as local investors snapped up shares.
The Securities and Exchange Commission is now keen for the likes of George Soros, Mark Mobius and other top fund managers to invest in the country and help the Colombo Stock Exchange double its capitalization to $14 billion in a year.
It will take a while for people to realize that a 30-year war has ended and the dividends it can bring, said Channa de Silva, director general of the Commission. Sri Lanka is a country waiting to unfold and we are confident there will be a lot of interest internationally.
Sri Lanka May Become ?Hong Kong of India? After War (Update2) - Bloomberg.com