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To Bolster Manufacturing, India Tries the China Way

China's take 30 years to be a manufacture hub, will Indian take another 30 years?

Purely mimicking is noting helpful. My view is India should stay on their back office track, and try to excel over other nations. Many countries are catching up this field, such as us Pakistan, the Philippines, etc. And China is gaining power in their software industries, their output value is even bigger than Indians. Here many Japanese firms outsource their back office to northeastern China.

Thanks for the free advise , but can you highlight what is pakistan's claim to fame with respect to economy and growth ???
 
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Delhi Mumbai Industrial Corridor :: An Indo-Japan Mega Infrastructure Project


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Target is to create 100 million new jobs
 
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it means :more poor Chinese will lose their jobs when India follow the same economic way with CHina .^^.

LOL Poor china only has 3 trillions in foreign reserves please tell me how much rich vietnam got in foreign reserves
 
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OKi, let's see if China have any global brand in the future or not , if you can not have, then doom day comming so close now :lol:

you silly troll I would worry more a near bankrupt nation like vietnam with roughly 3 billions(LOL dont know what that amount can buy in this day and age) in foreign reserves first if i were you LOOOOL
 
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Hey it is passing from my city,hurrahhh:victory::victory:
Work has been started unofficially on this project..

---------- Post added at 08:48 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:47 PM ----------

Hey it is passing from my city,hurrahhh:victory::victory::super::crazy_pilot:
Work has been started unofficially on this project..
 
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you silly troll I would worry more a near bankrupt nation like vietnam with roughly 3 billions(LOL dont know what that amount can buy in this day and age) in foreign reserves first if i were you LOOOOL


When they open up their economies to foreign investment , they will prosper rapidly too. Like other countries. Vietnamese are very industrious.
 
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When they open up their economies to foreign investment , they will prosper rapidly too. Like other countries. Vietnamese are very industrious.

they already open up buddy but messed up big time

As Vietnam battles galloping inflation and a plummeting currency, a new challenge has emerged - a general collapse of confidence in the state's ability to heal the ailing economy.

With an eye on the brash success of neighbouring China, Vietnam's obsessive pursuit of growth lasted for two decades until economic threats forced it to shift attention to stability this year.

The ruling Communist Party, which has total control in the one-party nation, announced an overhaul of its economic model during a five-yearly congress in January and a slew of monetary and tax austerity measures have followed.

But as pressure on the economy continues to mount, the political system itself has come into question from businesses and the Vietnamese people.

"What is happening in Vietnam is a crisis of confidence," a foreign investor in the southern business hub Ho Chi Minh City told AFP.

In 2008, as financial turmoil swept the globe, Vietnamese authorities responded by injecting massive liquidity into the economy, and speculative bubbles multiplied.

State-owned shipbuilder Vinashin embarked on a flurry of investments, racking up debts of $US4.4 billion ($A4.12 billion) that eventually saw it plunge into quasi-bankruptcy.

Now Vietnam is trying to bring down Asia's highest rate of inflation - nearly 22 per cent year-on-year in October - trim its trade deficit and strengthen the dong, which has seen four devaluations in 15 months.

The authorities have upped interest rates to try to cool the economy and choke off speculation, piling intense pressure on small- and medium-sized firms with lenders now charging upwards of 20 per cent.

Experts predict the pain will continue for at least another 18 months.

"The price to be paid is enormous. There are already a certain number of corpses on the pavement," said the investor.

But while he said the measures were "necessary", others are wondering if they will be enough.

Dominic Scriven, general manager at Dragon Capital, said the last five years had seen Vietnam's economic model "go out of balance".

"The question is, does everybody realise that and are the measures put in place sufficient to restore the balance?"

Recent signs are that foreign and local businesses have yet to be convinced.

Pledged foreign direct investment into Vietnam slumped by almost a quarter in the first 10 months of the year, to $11.3 billion, according to official figures.

Business confidence has fallen for three consecutive quarters in 2011, according to a survey by the European Chamber of Commerce published earlier this month.

"The measures taken to stabilise the economy have so far failed to ease the concern of the business community about the macroeconomic outlook," the group said.

In a country still marked by a culture of opacity inherited from years of war, the true situation is difficult to determine.

And when even the official picture is far from rosy - with barely eight weeks worth of foreign exchange reserves and fears over the level of bad debts held by public banks - the lack of visibility is worrying.

The benchmark VN-Index at the Ho Chi Minh City stock exchange, opened with great fanfare in 2000, slumped to just 383 points in August this year, barely a third of its peak in 2007 after Vietnam joined the World Trade Organisation.

It is a far cry from the 1990s when Vietnam, then described as the next Asian 'tiger economy', bounded onto the world stage with a seemingly unstoppable roadmap to success - opening up vast swathes of unexploited land and mobilising a young and cheap labour force.

But the economy has struggled to build on that promise.

Jonathan Pincus, an economist and dean of the Fulbright School in Ho Chi Minh City, said the country's large trade deficit - $12.4 billion in 2010 - is a sign that the previous growth strategy was past its sell-by date.

"Vietnam is kind of stuck producing the same sort of things ... more and more coffee, rice, cashews, paper, shirts and shoes - and is having trouble moving into higher value-added production, a lot of which is therefore imported from China," he said.

The country's institutions have failed to endorse major reforms, he added. "Everyone knows it's time for another strategy, but they know they don't have the political structure that is coherent enough."

Even ordinary Vietnamese have shown nervousness over the economic future, ditching the currency in favour of the relative safe havens of gold and dollars in recent months - a move echoed by some banks which, according to one source, have profited handsomely by speculating against the dong.

"You got people voting the only way they could vote which was to sell the currency. So everybody - households, companies, banks, state enterprises, government people - were selling the Vietnam dong," said a businessman who asked to remain anonymous.

It was evidence of general distrust, he said, and the authorities "have more work to do to show they deserve the mandate" of the people.

Vietnamese economic reform faces crisis
 
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LOL Poor china only has 3 trillions in foreign reserves please tell me how much rich vietnam got in foreign reserves
bcz you have 1,3 trillion people , and you keep enslaving poor Chinese , so you have 3 trillions, if 3 trillions share to 1,3 trillion Chinese, so each Chinese only have around 2,8 USD :lol:
ChinaToday said:
you silly troll I would worry more a near bankrupt nation like vietnam with roughly 3 billions(LOL dont know what that amount can buy in this day and age) in foreign reserves first if i were you LOOOOL
Oh, so will welcome Japan-US-EU investor to help us to become manufacturer nation ,and we will be Richer than CHina soon.

We don't need to use our reserve , bcz Japan can loan ODA to VN in very low interest, we will pay back when we get richer :P
 
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bcz you have 1,3 trillion people , and you keep enslaving poor Chinese , so you have 3 trillions, if 3 trillions share to 1,3 trillion Chinese, so each Chinese only have around 2,8 USD :lol:

Oh, so will welcome Japan-US-EU investor to help us to become manufacturer nation ,and we will be Richer than CHina soon.

We don't need to use our reserve , bcz Japan can loan ODA to VN in very low interest, we will pay back when we get richer :P

Education in Vietnam... :rofl:
 
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Mods need to take action on this thread its become totally off-topic!
 
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