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How is the plan?

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    Votes: 161 61.7%
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    Votes: 53 20.3%
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    261
Ok, ok, ok.

Incredible India. India Shining. India Superpower. India > USA.

36% of NASA scientists are Indian.
38% of doctors in USA are Indian.
34% of Microsoft employees are Indian.

Happy? :smitten:

Pls don't flatter me about all that .All I want is a more balanced view.
Not 34% but some 12-15% are indians in Microsoft

Same with Nasa it will be som5-10%
About doctors it will be 12-15%

Developereo I could welcome more professional and rational views on the Indian economy.Not rants when a poster is on a emotional high or low

Balanced views are always welcome:cheers:
 
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Stealth said:
Frankly speaking i have 100 of friends belongs to india one of my very good friend wish me happy eid yesturday and we were discussing about the situation. I said to him that now adays India economy is too much thats why maybe your GOI spending soo much money on weapons after What he said to me guess what ?

"Seriously WE DONT CARE ABOUT OUR ECONOMY GROWTH" our people death ratio too much... poverty rate incresses daybyday ... no food nuthing 90% of population under povrty! all such so called economy money goz to our GOI pockets nuthing for us"

So thats your Economy ???

Incoherent rant from a staff member is highly regretted

Ignore him, he aint worth reply.
 
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It is good that India income will triple

I fear that global resources will be insufficient when China and India consume more
 
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Congratulations India! Hope India will promote peace and prosperity in the region.

In addition, Indian may need to improve its labor law. Suzuki, Hyundai, etc don’t want to see their managers beaten to death when labor dispute arises.
 
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It is good that India income will triple

I fear that global resources will be insufficient when China and India consume more

I usually err on the side of neutrality.

IMO the insufficiency of any resource will force people (both Indian and Chinese) to think differently and come up with new solutions to expected problems. And tidings are good for all even the Pakistanis. Unless of course there is Nuke war/Meteorite strike.
 
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In addition, Indian may need to improve its labor law. Suzuki, Hyundai, etc don’t want to see their managers beaten to death when labor dispute arises.

Nah dont worry about that we have already have enough managers from IT majors.... Surely they are not yet beaten to death.....


On the lighter side just do not ask the employee under the manager about his views towards manager in IT industry.... its bad manners.:lol:
 
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Frankly speaking i have 100 of friends belongs to india one of my very good friend wish me happy eid yesturday and we were discussing about the situation. I said to him that now adays India economy is too much thats why maybe your GOI spending soo much money on weapons after What he said to me guess what ?

"Seriously WE DONT CARE ABOUT OUR ECONOMY GROWTH" our people death ratio too much... poverty rate incresses daybyday ... no food nuthing 90% of population under povrty! all such so called economy money goz to our GOI pockets nuthing for us"

So thats your Economy ???

and u believe what he said Word-to-word !!!:cheesy::cheesy::cheesy:

ur frnd might have had some personal experiences but u can't generalize it... well if that's what u want to buy !!!
 
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World Bank unveils $4.345 bln in loans to India

(AFP) – 2 hours ago
WASHINGTON — The World Bank on Tuesday announced 4.345 billion dollars in loans to India, including 2.0 billion for the banking sector.
The development lender said its executive board approved Tuesday loans for projects in five countries, with the loans for India by far the largest.

The World Bank said it had extended a two-billion-dollar, 30-year loan to support the banking sector, in response to a request from the Indian government to support stimulus measures to counter the global economic crisis.

A 28-year loan of 1.195 billion dollars was aimed at increasing the availability of long-term financing for the India Infrastructure Finance Company Limited to provide public-private financing of infrastructure projects.

A loan of 1.0 billion dollars, maturing in nearly 30 years, would support the Fifth Power System Development Project aimed at strengthening India's electricity transmission system.

The three loans will be provided by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the bank's institution that aims to reduce poverty in middle-income and creditworthy poorer countries by promoting sustainable development.

A 150-million-dollar, 35-year credit was granted by the bank's International Development Association, which helps the poorest country by providing interest-free loans and grants.

The IDA credit is to assist the Andhra Pradesh Rural Waters Supply and Sanitation Project, aimed at improving rural water supply and sanitation services in the southeastern state.

Other loans and credits approved were: 1.0 billion euros to Hungary; 200 million dollars to Latvia; 71.50 million dollars to Nepal; and 65.2 million dollars to Vietnam.

AFP: World Bank unveils $4.345 bln in loans to India
 
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I shall reply to you, there is a 'rumor' going around that ~Sept 30 there's gonna be a huge crash in US/European markets.... :flame:


that won't be good for China. Since it is so heavily invested in the U.S. and Europe. in fact you could expect millions more Chinese workers migrate back to the countryside from lack of work.
 
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Thats why my all indian friends always say same thing to me... i think thr is 2 Indian states in the world one whr u live and 1 whr thy live right ?

Bitterness oozing out of every word....:rofl:

Good for India.At least 8% growth is needed every year.
 
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our economists said china have to maintain 8% growth to ensure high employment rate,i guess this theory is also used to india,congrats anyway
 
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our economists said china have to maintain 8% growth to ensure high employment rate,i guess this theory is also used to india,congrats anyway

8% is needed to double income every 7 years..anything less than 8% is unacceptable if India has to maintain growth.
 
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Crisis, what crisis? India sails on through

MATT WADE
September 22, 2009
AS FACTORIES across the world slashed production and laid off workers in the dark months that followed the demise of Lehman Brothers, one major economy bucked the trend.

India's industrial production grew modestly despite the global financial gloom between October 2008 and February 2009. Meanwhile, activity in most other countries plunged. Japan's industrial production dropped by a sickening 30 per cent in the same period and Germany's by about 17 per cent.

India's economic resilience has been a bright spot on the mostly bleak global economic landscape.

The Reserve Bank of Australia recently revised up its forecast for global growth, largely because of the economic performance of India and its giant neighbour, China.

While India's economy has pulled back from its runaway 9.3 per cent growth of 2007, it is still expected to expand by about 6 per cent this year.

A poor monsoon season could subdue growth, but many local economists are predicting the Indian economy will surge back to about 8 per cent growth next year.

There has been a lot of attention on the way Chinese demand has helped keep the Australian economy afloat, but India has also helped.

Solid demand from China and India, for example, drove a June-quarter rise in coal exports, Australia's biggest export earner.

India's growing importance as a destination for Australian resources was underscored last month when Petronet LNG signed a $20.5 billion gas deal with ExxonMobil Australia, the first long-term gas contract between the two nations.

Under the agreement, 1.5 million tonnes of liquefied natural gas will be shipped to India annually from the Gorgon project in Western Australia for 20 years.


India has been Australia's fastest growing major trading partner over the past five years and is now Australia's fourth-largest export market.

Australian trade officials hope a long-running feasibility study for an Australia-India free trade agreement will be finished this year and lay the foundations for further trade growth.

Austrade's chief economist, Tim Harcourt, says more than 2100 Australian businesses trade with India and exporters are looking to Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Bangalore and the like for growth opportunities.

"China and India now account for nearly a quarter of Australia's exports and there's a growing proportion of two-way investment," Harcourt says.

"In short, the big picture shows that Australia will be hugging the panda and riding the elephant for some time yet."

Although many exporters, especially those providing education services to overseas students, will be hoping the recent spate of attacks on Indian students in Australia doesn't damage the trade relationship.

Optimism about India's economic outlook has been reflected in a sharemarket turnaround.

India's Sensex was hit hard late last year, but as it became apparent that India had survived relatively unscathed, money came flooding back.

Politics provided an additional fillip. When the incumbent national Government, led by the centre-left Congress Party, won a convincing victory in May, investors greeted the result with enthusiasm. The Indian sharemarket has risen by about 60 per cent since the start of the year.

"The global downturn did not affect India to the same extent as many other countries - for us it has just caused a slowdown," says R. Venkatesan, a senior fellow at India's National Council of Applied Economic Research.

"This is because India overall is not as integrated into the world economy as most other economies in Asia."

This relative isolation is reflected in India's exports, which accounted for only 15 per cent of gross domestic product last year, compared with more than 30 per cent in China.

The banking sector added another layer of insulation. Most of India's banks are still publicly owned and are very conservative investors. India's financial sector therefore had little exposure to the toxic assets that caused so much trouble on international financial markets.

Another unexpected positive came through remittances from the large Indian diaspora; an expected slump in this lucrative source of foreign exchange did not materialise.

Economist Swaminathan S. Anklesaria Aiyar wrote in The Times of India that remittances from overseas Indians hit a record $US46.4 billion in 2008-09, up from $US43.5 billion the previous year. Swaminathan estimates the 2008-09 flow was worth 4 per cent of gross domestic product.

Some jobs have been lost, especially in businesses exposed to global markets. India's airline industry has been hit hard and its merchandise exports have fallen sharply, but its increasingly important services exports - like computer services and business processing - have held up.

Since 1991, India has embarked on a fitful program of economic reform, often criticised for being too slow, but there is a strong view in India that this has been justified by its recent resilience.

"We have always followed a process of gradual reform and, given the country's profile, you can hardly do anything else," says Indranil Sen Gupta, chief economist of DSP Merrill Lynch in India. "That approach seems to have been vindicated."

Crisis, what crisis? India sails on through

Well... that explains why India is not too keen on the Iran pipeline project. And not to forget India's large gas deal with Qatar too.

Petronet is not the only Indian company which has plans for Australia's Gorgon gas field. According to Forbes -

Shell... has also signed a memorandum of understanding with Gujarat State Petroleum Corporation Ltd in India for the possible sale of 0.5 mtpa of LNG.

FACTBOX-Australia's Gorgon, giant LNG source for Asia - Forbes.com

That's great news! With increasing economic cooperation between Asia-Pacific powers like India, China and Australia, diplomatic and political cooperation will also increase!

More reports on the deal -

The Australian -

THE massive Gorgon liquefied natural gas project planned for Western Australia's Barrow Island continues to gather steam, with part-owner ExxonMobil completing a deal to supply India with as much as $19 billion worth of offtake.

Huge gas project on target | The Australian

AsiaOne -

ENERGY giant Exxonmobil's Australian arm has signed a gas supply contract with India's Petronet worth A$25 billion (S$30 billion) over 20 years, Energy Minister Martin Ferguson said on Tuesday.

Exxonmobil signs S$30b deal
 
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Although Indian economy is in shape tht it can afford a bit higher gas price...is this a long term solution??..... I don't think so....first Liquifing a gas to fill ship containers and then di-liquifying it at Dahej Gas terminal is not good solution...I still fill gas pipeline is a way better solution....
 
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