Anybody who works in the field of policy and development knows how hard won this miracle has been for China. China's growth will continue well into the future, particularly because the institutional risks that China faces are now far less significant than they were a couple of decades ago. The miracle is precisely the fact that they've managed to achieve this, despite those institutional risks. Most importantly, they've stubbornly stuck to a China centric development policy despite what a lot of experts have had to say, something that has worked out very well for them.
As for India watching from the sidelines, I don't think it will. However, we have to develop a strategy that works for India- one that will be very different from China's. In higher education, for instance, China policy has almost functioned like a draft, with people being 'slotted' in where the state found it appropriate. While this has worked, to a great extent, for China, India's political structure will never permit it.
India keeping an eye on China is good, it focuses attention on just how far we've fallen behind and how urgently we need to change things. Over the last few months, at the very least, this sense of urgency seem to be showing in the day-to-day functioning of the government.
Completely agree, India indeed is lucky to have China as a bigger neighbour/rival, since it helps keeps india on its toe and avoids it from diverting its attention from what really matters/is important i.e improving living conditions of its people/infrastructure/power/education/science etc.
Also, i dont understand why some members here(together with some ofour western intellectuals) seem to always think China will collapse or stop growing anytime soon. Since China still hasnt reached even half of its real potential eyt and several regions in its western regions are still quite poor/backward. So funny enough/as ironic as it might seem, China still enjoys the backwardness advantage. Since its relatively low gdp per capital with increasingly huge industrial base still gives it a huge room for growth before it can reach stability/saturation like Japan did during its heydays. So in this case China is very much different from Japan, in that Japan growed heathily when it was still relatively poor/backward compared with to the U.S , until it reached a developed/advanced/high living standard at par with that of the west/U.S before it started stagnating. This is different with China, stillt the country still has a longggggggg way to go before it gets to this level, hence i belive they will keep growing at at least 5-8% at least for the foreseeable future/coming decades. This has little to do with the so called 'communist party prowess/efficiency', but more to do with a natural progression/growth of the country irregardless of which party governs/rule the country, since the country already has a good industrial base/infrastructure for future growth. So we should all be realistic and keep our bais to ourselves while analysing such world issues.