he-man
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Nano is not a failure,its perfect if we keep in mind ists price.
Meanwhile Pakistan has not devloped even an motor cycle
Forget
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Nano is not a failure,its perfect if we keep in mind ists price.
Meanwhile Pakistan has not devloped even an motor cycle
Yeah i know that lol.They boast about CBU/CKD kits they sell in Pakistan They call it "manufacturing" @Fahad Khan 2Forget motorcycles,i doubt they have as of yet mastered cycles
Nano is not a failure,its perfect if we keep in mind ists price.
Meanwhile Pakistan has not devloped even an motor cycle
Forget motorcycles,i doubt they have as of yet mastered cycles
im a medical studentBut you have to applaud there patience which is even higher than than a medical student.I mean how one can read the same book again and again 5 times a day everyday
Anyway enough of the bashing for today.lol
Peace.
Guy do not behave like morons!!
Pakistan had it's own development program and following vehicle is a excellent example of simplistic engineering project. It's an inspiration .. wow..
Can you beat this?
dont bring religion unnecessarily to this thread.What can they do.
Half their population thinks that by just reading quran,they will gain intelligence thus sending children to madarassas
Nano is a good car. but, many private car buyers have NO faith in Tata Cars. that is the hard fact.Comment on nano failure hurt you inferiority so much that you started commenting on religion.....
Comment on nano failure hurt you inferiority so much that you started commenting on religion.....
Nano is a good car. but, many private car buyers have NO faith in Tata Cars. that is the hard fact.
dont bring religion unnecessarily to this thread.
India’s roads have proved treacherous, with car and truckmakers suffering steep falls in sales amid a wider slowdown in Asia’s third-largest economy. The nation's fields, however, have rarely appeared more bountiful – and the market for tractors is booming.
Tractor sales are set to jump by at least 20 per cent (all-time high of 6,33,656 units in fiscal 2013-14) when official figures for the last financial year are released next month, according to estimates compiled by the Financial Times, as rising rural prosperity translates into a sustained rebound for the world's largest tractor market by volume.
India’s $4.5bn tractor industry pits local manufacturers such as Mahindra & Mahindra and Tafe against global players including US-based John Deere and Case New Holland, a former division of Italian auto group Fiat, in a sector where nearly 700,000 farmers took delivery of new machines in the year to March.
This sales fillip reflects growing rural affluence in a country where around half of all workers are employed in agricultural industries, and whose villages have been buoyed by increases in government subsidy schemes alongside higher spending on roads and infrastructure.
Yet the tractor surge has been driven by more specific factors, notably the best annual monsoon rains in more than a decade, according to Rajesh Jejurikar, head of farm equipment at automaker Mahindra & Mahindra, India’s largest tractor seller by market share.
Last week Mahindra, which overtook John Deere to become the world's largest tractor seller by volume in 2012, reported March farm vehicle sales that exceeded expectations. “Most of rural India doesn’t have formal jobs with salaries, so tractor sentiment is driven fundamentally by water and harvests, which is why we had such a great year,” Mr Jejurikar said.
Increases in programmes guaranteeing crop prices also played a part, alongside more available credit, as an influx of new agricultural lenders in recent years have heightened competition in a sector long dominated by cautious state-backed banks.
Rural job-creation schemes have helped inadvertently too, noted Ajay Srinivasan of research group Crisil, by drawing workers away from the land. “They make labour much more expensive, so the farmer thinks, ‘I might as well buy a tractor than pay more to hire all these people’,” he said.
India’s tractor growth is attracting interest from global manufacturers even in a market where cost-conscious farmers tend to shun the more powerful and expensive vehicles popular in industrialised economies. Illinois-based John Deere, for instance, opened a new $80m factory in the state of Madhya Pradesh late last year, its second in the country.
Yet while John Deere and New Holland have built a market share of 7 and 6 per cent, respectively, according to Shishir Kumar, auto analyst at credit ratings group ICRA, both have struggled to match the extensive rural dealer networks of larger domestic players such as Mahindra.
“The foreign groups are trying to make inroads, though its tough going,” he said. “But as agriculture here gets more professional and mechanised, farmers will want to trade up. So they are playing a long game.”
Cool, was not aware of this!
Ashok Leyland Stallion serving in Royal Thai Army. India had exported Trucks to Thailand.