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Is Modi's "Make In India" All Hype?

I think Pakistan is exporting in a year what India exports in a month. So comparisons like this are just number manipulations. Also, manufacturing is long term process. It will take several years to see how policies created today will impact in five years to 10 years time.
 
months ago Riaz haq opened a thread on Drowning Indian economy and shining pak economy..
He quoted Indian author as his source, and when i been to Indian blogger... i have noticed Riazhaq as his source...

A says B is my source, B says A is my source.. and it is infinity loop.. lol..
 
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This is the best example of " Beggani Shaadi mein Abdullha Dewaana "
 
Why do I think of the China' 1992 years?
The reform of the Modi need to be more powerful.
 
Why do I think of the China' 1992 years?
The reform of the Modi need to be more powerful.
Modi government is trying their level but the politics and infrastructure bottleneck is way too big, it will require 8-10 years of hard work to clear the infra bottleneck. India is a mess, nothing is organized here.
 
okay okay Made in India is a failure CPEC is a major success. Please allow us to be apart of CPEC.
 
Modi government is trying their level but the politics and infrastructure bottleneck is way too big, it will require 8-10 years of hard work to clear the infra bottleneck. India is a mess, nothing is organized here.
China has spent a lot on infra since 1949...
We don't have any British people who left us a huge railway network....
Seriously, many people don't know how much China has done before 1978....
Our policy on improving infra is continuous....
8-10 years??? You can't just rely one one or two terms of government....
 
China has spent a lot on infra since 1949...
We don't have any British people who left us a huge railway network....
Seriously, many people don't know how much China has done before 1978....
Our policy on improving infra is continuous....
8-10 years??? You can't just rely one one or two terms of government....
You didn't face the drain of wealth which we did, plus we are a "Socialist Democratic" country, so we cannot impose development on people, if people want basic infrastructure they will get it but they will have to surrender their land first, which no one is ready to surrender.
 
You didn't face the drain of wealth which we did, plus we are a "Socialist Democratic" country, so we cannot impose development on people, if people want basic infrastructure they will get it but they will have to surrender their land first, which no one is ready to surrender.
No one wants to surrender land or house.
The question is governmental compensation, and the system to support them in the long term.

My tiny apartment will be demolished when CBD spreads to my community in 2 years and I will be compensated by an 10% bigger apartment at the same region and free decoration fee and amenities...Or, I will be given 0.5 million US dollars which I can use on my own. 90% households in my building agree, out apartment assembly has made an agreement based on the voice of the majority, then the rest 10% voice should be neglected.

I am sick of people in South Asia always quoting "democracy" as an excuse...
It's like those so-called democratic countries are not building expressways and high-speed railways.
It's like any project in the west can win everybody's consent.
(Japan has just launched a new HSR in the north)

If you provide unfair compensation or those who lose their land will become poorer unlike the case in China where people become millionaire overnight...Then, blame your own fiscal capacity.....
@Bussard Ramjet
 
Dirty laundry: Welspun tangle highlights #India's #quality challenge. #MakeInIndia #Modi http://reut.rs/2bLju9n via @Reuters

Questions over the exact provenance of bedsheets sold by Welspun India to America's middle classes have not only wiped $740 million off the firm's market value, but also revived one of Indian manufacturing's enduring headaches: quality.

India's government, desperate to accelerate growth and create more jobs, has backed a "Make in India" manufacturing push. India already makes everything from car parts to t-shirts, but is trying to move up the chain to make higher-end products, like Apple's iPhone.

One major hurdle, however, has been product quality, often blighted by low salaries, poor training and sketchy suppliers. As India manufactures more, cheap is not always cheerful.


Quality assurance experts in India and beyond, however, said damage from the Welspun case could be contained - if the authorities and businesses move quickly to put in place stringent quality assurance standards.

"The government and the companies should themselves put in place better quality control standards to ensure India's image is protected," said a certifier at the Indian arm of a Europe-based textile certification company.

The $108 billion textile industry accounts for a tenth of India's manufacturing production, 5 percent of GDP and 13 percent of export earnings, according to government data. It is the country's second-largest employer after agriculture.

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It's not clear what led to the problem. Welspun, whose share price nearly halved this week, has said it would do an external audit of its supply chain.

Other Indian manufacturers distanced themselves from Welspun, but many fretted over the broader impact as the country tries to bet on quality, not just cheap workers, where it faces constant competition from regional rivals.

"It's high time exporters improve the quality of their products," said S.C. Ralhan, president of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations, set up by the government and industry to promote exports. He said the group would take up the issue of quality with its members.

Arvind Sinha, national president of the Textile Association of India, said India's image as a manufacturing destination for textiles could be tarnished.

"This is another blot on the Indian exports resume," said an analyst at a local brokerage, who asked not to be named as it would violate his firm's policies. "The Welspun fiasco could have ripple effects and force companies to scout for options in other regions in Asia that have unscathed records."
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DRUGS AND NOODLES

India has been here before.

Its $15 billion pharmaceutical industry, a global supplier of cheaper generic medicines, has been dogged by quality concerns, with health regulators in the United States, Britain and Europe barring some plants from producing drugs for their markets because of inadequate standards.

Highlighting weak official checks and under-resourced testing facilities, Nestle India had to pull its popular Maggi instant noodles off the shelves last year after local regulators found some samples contained unsafe levels of lead. Subsequent tests at government-accredited laboratories showed the noodles were safe for consumption.
 
#India’s falling #exports killed 70,000 #jobs in just one quarter. #Modi #AchheDin http://qz.com/784625 via @qzindia

India’s dismal export growth is leading to massive job losses. And, after months of shrinking exports without any signs of improvement, the employment situation in Asia’s third-largest economy is set to worsen.
The jobs market is already in pain. In the July-September quarter of the 2015 fiscal year, India recorded the lowest job growth compared to the same period in 2009, 2011, and 2013.
Plummeting exports are adding to the problem. Some 70,000 jobs were lost in the second quarter of 2015 alone due to a fall in India’s exports, according to the Associated Chambers of Commerce & Industry in India (Assocham). Most of these were contractual in nature, the joint study by Assocham and Thought Arbitrage, a research institute, said.

“While contractual jobs were lost, not adequate regular jobs were added to compensate that loss. Textile has been most affected,” the industry body, which represents over 450,000 Indian business entities, said in a release on Sept. 18.
India’s export growth has been negative in the last couple of years. Lacklustre global demand is one reason. It also doesn’t help that India’s manufacturing sector is still weak. Private investment in manufacturing is yet to pick up, which means exporters are scrambling for funds. Their funding costs are high too. All this has had an impact on the jobs market because exports have been slacking in sectors that are labour-intensive, such as engineering goods, leather, textiles, and rubber, among others.
Eight of the 14 labour-intensive sectors saw exports shrink in the 2016 financial year. In the previous year, job growth in these sectors was the slowest in seven years.
 
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