Sheer pragmatism will drive through the reforms. Look at any projection you like, ten years from now India will be the 3rd largest economy in nominal terms (it is already in PPP terms), 30 years from now it will overtake the US in nominal GDP and the gap between the top 3 (China, India and US) and the 4th largest economy (and thus the rest of the world) is going to grow massively in our lifetimes. In 2014, the gap between the 3rd largest and 4th largest economies (India and Japan respectively) was 50%, by 2050 the gap between the 3rd largest economy (US) and 4th (Indonesia) will be 240%. Ie the "big three" are going to be
the powers of this centuary. Any sense that India is somehow kept out of this arbitary club is entirely illogical and becomes less and less feasible as time goes on.
That was rather optimistic from those parties I suppose but it is more than reasonable to expect India to have a permenant seat 10 years from now. The idea it won't is rather unthinkable to be honest considering the respective power of India vis a vis some of the permenant members (Russia,UK and France). 10 years from now, a case against India's candidacy will be untenable.
Well said, as I have stated- India should just bide its time and the seat will be made available to it one way or another in the coming years. It's a case of when and not if now.
for you
@waz sir:
In 2050 the cumlative GDP (PPP)of the big three (China, India and US) is predicted to be more than the cumlative GDPs of the next
29 nations (4th-32nd).
Again, it is unthinkable that India doesn't get its rightful position.