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Why India will always remain the underdog.

ao333

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Two of the reasons for China’s shift to a slightly flexible exchange rate are obvious: foreign pressure in advance of this week’s G-20 meeting and the need to stimulate domestic demand and dampen inflation. But there is a third: China’s desire not to be seen as frustrating East Asian attempts at monetary cooperation aimed at the eventual creation of an Asian Monetary Fund.

Those efforts are being strongly pushed by Japan and Korea with the support of most of the 10 members of the Association of South East Asian Nations. But China has been an anomaly, on the one hand rhetorically supporting these moves while on the other having economic policies out of step with the region’s big players.

The recent turmoil in Euroland has focused East Asian minds on two issues.

First, the vulnerability of those nations with very open economies to international short-term capital flows. Flows into the Korean won, Thai baht and Singapore dollar became a proxy for China. These currencies became more volatile and tended to appreciate, putting them at a competitive disadvantage to China. Korea and Indonesia have both recently imposed some restrictions on short-term money movement.

Second, as Europe has shown, currency alignment without fiscal prudence and coordination is a recipe for chaos.

There is no Asian equivalent of the euro and there will not be in the foreseeable future. However, last year the Asian countries concerned did agree to a $120 billion multilateral fund for currency stabilization backed by two significant elements.

First, the voting system accorded equal power (28.4 percent) to Japan and China, while giving Korea, as usual, more weight than it’s worth (14.7 percent). The 10 Asean members share 28.4 percent, with Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore being equally weighted.

Although these weights are underpinned more by politics than economics, the idea of an East Asian unit of account based on them is being pushed by some bankers and economists in the forefront of regional cooperation. At the very least it could serve as a useful benchmark showing how far any one currency had gotten out of line with the weighted average of the others. Apply this benchmark to the past 12 months and it would show that most currencies had appreciated and the Chinese yuan had fallen. Hence, China needs to allow its currency to rise to keep it from creating regional disharmony.

Second, Asean plus China, Japan and Korea also made an important step toward mutual surveillance. The 13-member group agreed to establish the Macroeconomic Research Office in Singapore. It is expected to pronounce on national policies as well as regional and global issues that affect financial stability. This may prove toothless but its very creation by countries ultra-sensitive to external criticism is significant.

China is clearly worried that the Japanese and Korean positions on financial issues are taking away the initiative in regional cooperation from China, which has been foremost in pressing trade pacts. But that will remain the case so long as China insists on playing by different rules — including a pegged currency.

Whether regional trade and financial cooperation develop further or get stuck on the rocks of Sino-Japanese rivalry or Asean disunity remains to be seen. But progress in East Asia has the unfortunate side effect of increasing the divide between East and South Asia. This is growing for three reasons. First, India’s failure to catalyze South Asian free trade or as yet play a major role in global trade. Second, Myanmar: It should be a bridge, literally and figuratively, between East and South Asia, but its dysfunctional huge system is a barrier. Third, though India-China trade has been rising fast, Indian worries over water resources are rising equally fast.

A new report by the Strategic Foresight Group, a Mumbai think-tank, suggests that climate change will bring 10-to-30 percent falls in river flows from the Himalayas over the next 40 years while demand increases and groundwater resources are depleted. In theory this should spur cooperation between the approximately 1.3 billion people who live in the river basins on either side of the Himalayas. But instead it is increasing suspicions in India and Bangladesh in particular that upstream countries, notably China, hold the keys to the river flows and will use them for strategic gain.

As Europe declines and the U.S. stagnates, Asia’s potential and its fault lines become more clearly defined.

I.H.T. Op-Ed Contributor - East Asian Unity - NYTimes.com

How can India even dream to win a trade or hot war against China?
 
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To the thread starter nice try Metaphorically you are frustrated and need some venting. Maybe you should open a thread with title of your desired line to insult INDIANS. But by misleading thread title you showed us.........:azn:
I wonder how bangladeshi's going to feel about their thirsty population after they see this. Most likely they will turn a blind eye and spew another article bashing India.

EAST ASIA UNITY
 
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Any reason why this kind of title is posted in China defense except for it to be turned into another flame thread? Even if one somehow feels the urge to posted it it seems like Indian defense section is more appropriate.
 
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Yo, u r baiting for a fight again? :-)

This article highlights some of the problems facing these two regions, but certainly does not imply India's future is less than China's.

You're right. It's getting harder to bait you guys out into a fight. I guess I'll try something else next time.
 
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A new report by the Strategic Foresight Group, a Mumbai think-tank, suggests that climate change will bring 10-to-30 percent falls in river flows from the Himalayas over the next 40 years while demand increases and groundwater resources are depleted. In theory this should spur cooperation between the approximately 1.3 billion people who live in the river basins on either side of the Himalayas. But instead it is increasing suspicions in India and Bangladesh in particular that upstream countries, notably China, hold the keys to the river flows and will use them for strategic gain.

As Europe declines and the U.S. stagnates, Asia’s potential and its fault lines become more clearly defined.

I.H.T. Op-Ed Contributor - East Asian Unity - NYTimes.com

How can India even dream to win a trade or hot war against China?

So you read the above snippet and reach the conclusion that India will "Always remain the underdog". The lower reparian situation is the only sense that you made out of the above. And how about the following environmental disasters that may be bestowed up on China in the same vein as you wish will befall India?

Minister: China risks environmental disaster

The director of the State Environmental Protection Administration said that more than half of China's 21,000 chemical companies are near the Yangtze and Yellow rivers, which provide drinking water for tens of millions of people, and accidents could lead to "disastrous consequences."

"Facts have proved that prosperity at the expense of the environment is very superficial and very weak," Zhou Shengxian said at a news conference during the annual meeting of the National People's Congress. "It's only delaying disaster."

China's cities are among the world's smoggiest, and the government says its major rivers are badly polluted, leaving hundreds of millions of people without clean drinking water.

The above is just the first link that came up on google. You must be out of your mind considering that the global warming will effect only India and will have nothing to do with China!!!!

On top of that, you just turned the biggest disaster in waiting for the Chinese economy = de-regulation of Yuan, on its head by failing to understand what the writer intends to imply here = the Yuan peg as basis of China's hegemony in the region versus all other economies as an advantage for the communist country.

Nice comprehension my friend.......
 
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I guess someone is trying to stir up more issues between China and India. Many Indians and a few Chinese like to over exaggerate the military capabilities of their countries. And its interesting to see them debate. An article like this will create fireworks without the need of a colorful title. That being said, many Indians see itself as the next superpower that will exceed both US and China while its GDP is less than 1/10th of the US and its growth rate is below that of China when China's GDP is 4 times that of India. That is extremely prideful, isn't it?
 
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You're right. It's getting harder to bait you guys out into a fight. I guess I'll try something else next time.

Good luck to you.:cheers:
Wonder, how you stay unbanned even after openly trolling and flamebaiting, post after post. Lucky guy. ;)
 
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lol this is again gonna lead to a flame war.. :what:
 
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India's actual economy is falling to new lows every year, cuz its a call center, IT software services and back office law-human resource based only.

India's has severe incapability & incapacity to manufacture as compared to Pakistan or China, that it has to beg every other nation for ToT.
 
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India's has severe incapability & incapacity to manufacture as compared to Pakistan or China, that it has to beg every other nation for ToT.
Hold on, I totally agree that India in its current form has incapable to manufacture like China, but Pakistan?? Seriously???
 
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