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India's Path To Becoming The Next Global Superpower

India becoming the next superpower is ludicrous and idiotic,
let me list why India is not the next superpower.

Read this article from 2009:

10 reasons why India will not become a superpower

'Will India become a superpower?' This is a question that nags every Indian. With the nature of problems that plague India, the chances of the country becoming a superpower are remote.

"India needs to be, not a powerful or dominant country, but a country which is less discontented from within", says Ramachadra Guha writer, historian and biographer who spoke on the topic 'Ten Reasons Why India Will Not and Should Not Become a Superpower' in a meeting organised by Aspen Institute India in New Delhi.

Guha pointed out that in 1948, there was a mood of despair and gloom about India's prospects, the government was seen as the only agent that could bring about change.
Image: A copy of a newspaper showing photographs of PM Singh burnt by the BJP activists in Mumbai.
Photographs: Punit Paranjpe/Reuters


Today, however, there is a sense of optimism about India's prospects, although the government is seen as the major impediment in the country's progress.

Tarun Das, president, Aspen Institute India, said India needed more debates such as this to provide a more balanced view of the country's growth and development.

Of the 10 reasons he listed, Guha suggested that environmental degradation is likely to remain the most pressing challenge facing India. Primary education also remains a significant challenge that needs to be overcome.


He went on to elucidate the ten points that he thought would objectively prevent India from becoming a superpower:


Image: Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, Chinese President Hu Jintao and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh pose for a photo at the BRIC summit in Yekaterinburg
Photographs: Sergei Karpukhin/Reuters


1.Religious extremism: Long term trends indicate that liberals and moderates in every religious community in India are on the defensive.

2. Left wing extremism: Extremism in the form of the Naxalite movement, which is a result of geographical reasons and also social and political forces, owing to the continued dispossession and deprivation of tribal people in India.
Image: Women naxalites wait before their performance during a protest rally.
Photographs: Jayanta Shaw/Reuters


3. Corruption: The corruption and corrosion of the power center in India, as a result of political parties functioning as family firms rather than open, transparent political systems.

4. Decline of public institutions: This includes universities, police, civil services, the judiciary (except for higher judiciary) etc.


5. Rich-poor divide: The increasing gap between the rich and the poor which is particularly manifested through farmer suicides in India, a phenomenon that has become pervasive only in the last 10-15 years, perhaps because there is now the expectation of a 'good life' that did not exist before.

6. Environmental degradation: The degradation at a local level, which is impacting people's lives in very real ways, whether in the form of massive depletion of underground aquifers, chemical contamination of soil, death of rivers, loss of species etc.


7. Apathy of the media: Apathy in covering issues of rising income inequality, environmental degradation.

8. Political chaos: The political fragmentation manifests as coalition governments at both the central and regional levels, which makes it very difficult to forge sustainable long term policies in the realm of health, education, etc.


9. Border disputes: India's unresolved border disputes, especially in Kashmir and the North East (Nagaland and Manipur) which indicates that there are parts of India that are not comfortable with being part of India.

10 reasons why India will not become a superpower - Rediff.com Business

I removed the 10th one because I felt it was referring to Pakistan and it was insulting Pakistan.


India isn't even considered a great power. China is considered a great power.


MAP OF GREAT POWERS OF THE 21st CENTURY
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If India isn't even a great power, how is India on the road of becoming a superpower?

India has three main rebellions:
1) Kashmir
2) Naxals
3) ULFA

In conclusion anyone saying that India is on the road of becoming a superpower is terribly ignorant.
 
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In the coming years, as the Indian economy opens to further foreign investment, Indian firms will thrive and grow into the Fortune 100 ranks. India will begin to command a seat at the table for all major global decisions including those around energy, security and finance. With a young and educated talent pool, India is beginning to drive both the production and consumption of the world's goods and services. Indian technology companies have already risen in the services industry, and have grown to become sizable businesses. Companies such as Wipro and TCS are today bustling giants, and are continuing to gain traction, competing head-to-head with global powerhouses such as IBM and Accenture. By focusing on the needs of Indian consumers, companies such as Airtel, Tata Motors, and Reliance Petrochemicals are also quickly becoming global engineering forces in their fields.

India's Path To Becoming The Next Global Superpower


Before you talk about superpower, you need to define what IS a superpower.

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India just do not know their weaknesses.
 
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