I said it was arguable. And you are right there I guess, although the gap is still wide.
The gap is meaningless. It does not mean anything to compare two things which cannot be compared.
Again, there is still a lot of gap between India's $-5.4 billion & Pakistan's $+604 million (0.604 billion).
Oh bhai mere!
Ok listen.
Consider two companies, Apple and Nokia.
Apple has $10,000 of liquid assets. (comparable to forex reserves in case of a country)
Nokia has $5,000 of liquid assets.
Apple has $2,000 out of $10,000 in the form of cash in its current account and $8,000 in the form of Gold.
Nokia has $3,000 out of $5,000 in the form of cash in its current account and $2,000 in the form of Gold.
Does that mean that Nokia is richer than Apple?
Hell no!
It just means that Nokia has more of its liquid assets in the form of cash than does Apple. In simple terms, Nokia has pocket change in the form of quarters. Apple has in bills of $100.
I hope you now understand the difference.
Again, when you see that GDP per capita between Pakistan & India are almost the same, even though India has a much larger (overall) GDP & economy than Pakistan, I am not sure if debt-GDP ratio is irrelevant as you think it is.
Debt-GDP ratio is ambiguous and does not give a clear picture always.
Debt-GDP ratio can, though, indicate the prosperity of the citizenry of the country but that too not always.
Here is some interesting data I found on forex reserves:
I am sure you can see that Pakistan & India aren't too different either when it comes to forex reserves - external debt results.
That graph is again meaningless.
Why?
Watch closely. You have intervals of $2.67 trillion in the graph.
India's forex reserves are around $320billion.
Pakistan's forex reserves are around $19 billion.
But since the interval is itself sooooooooooo large, hence, both India and Pakistan fall in the same interval.
If you want the actual picture, just contrast $320billion with $19 billion
GDP growth rate is positive & increasing (unlike the US that had negative GDP growth rate when Obama took office) shows that the economy is expanding, shows that the WOT is only a temporary phase that will pass by soon.
GDP growth rate of Pakistan is, at present, far lower than that of India. Fair to say it's stalled right now.
It could be because of WoT. We do not know for sure yet.
GDP overall might be good for an international image, but GDP per capita is important in knowing the true conditions inside your country.
GDP per capita is at most a measure of human indicators. It only tells that the average Pakistani produces more than an average Indian does.
It does not show, though, that Indians collectively produce far more than do Pakistanis.
The more the GDP, the more that trade volume.
The more the trade volume, the more influence a country exercises over another.
Take the case of China, India and Japan, for example.
China has far more trade with Japan than does India. Hence, China exercises far greater influence on Japan than does India.
India is at number 23, with the stock of FDI at home equal to $ 191,100,000,000. Pakistan is at number 61, with the stock of FDI at home equal to $ 30,090,000,000. Considering that India is five times the size of Pakistan by land (meaning much more natural resources & opportunities for FDI), & 7 times by population (meaning a big market for FDIs), the results in FDI aren't too different either.
India's size being far greater than that of Pakistan is merely an excuse.
That does not change the fact that India DOES invite far greater FDI than does Pakistan.
More FDI means more money to grow.
India has more money to grow and hence, India has far better chance of growing and growing fast than does Pakistan.