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11 Numbers Showing India Has a Long Way to Go to Become the Next China

:p: I'll remember that the next time Norway (#2 on that list:chilli:) sends out an international aid package:

NknT9MB.png


:lol:Just messing with you. I love Switzerland, but mostly your chocolate.
Buddy, lately I am watching the Serial called Vikings. I love the show. It seems you guys slaughtered,
raped and enslaved the ancestors of the British during the Viking invasion of England.
Shouldnt you guys send money to poor Britain which is only ranked 19th.:lol:
I demand retribution for Britannia.:butcher:
 
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11 Numbers Showing India Has a Long Way to Go to Become the Next China

With a charismatic, new leader and the world’s strongest economic expansion, India seems at last to be coming out of the shadow of its big neighbor to the north, China.


  • Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to China this week is an attempt to demonstrate the South Asian nation’s new confidence and let the world know that India is following in China’s footsteps to become an important global power.

    “The re-emergence of India and China and their relationship will have a profound impact on the two countries and the course of this century,” Mr. Modi said in a speech in Beijing on Friday. “Our relationship has been complex in recent decades. But, we have a historic responsibility to turn this relationship into a source of strength for each other and a force of good for the world.”

    While it is true that India’s economic growth has surpassed China’s in recent quarters, a quick glance at even the most basic economic indicators show how far India’s economy has to go.



    AM-BJ042A_CHIND_G_20150515052412.jpg

    China’s GDP is almost five times the size of India’s. In fact, its exports in 2013 alone were bigger than India’s entire economy. China’s GDP per capita was around $6,800 that year while India’s was less than $1,500.

    Around 10 times more cars are sold in China than in India annually and China has 25% more mobile phone subscribers. India loses on other indicators as well such as power and road infrastructure and the number of toilets.

    While India’s diverse and vibrant democracy will continue to dictate and sometimes delay the pace of its march to development, the country understands it could learn a few lessons from China’s success.

    Mr. Modi will need some more magic tricks if he ever wants India’s economy to become as large as China’s. At the current rate of economic expansion, that would take 78 years.

    Corrections: A previous version of the graphic in the post mislabeled the amount of remittances received in China and India.

    For breaking news, features and analysis from India, click here and follow WSJ India on Facebook.

    The WSJ is now on LINE. Scan to follow or click “Add Friends” from your mobile device to add our official account.
  • 11 Numbers Showing India Has a Long Way to Go to Become the Next China - India Real Time - WSJ

instead of comparing india and china, we should do how far pak is from china.
 
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China is still a developing nation.

And the news is from which year... 2013?

Look I do not have bad intention but one idiot wrote that india is crying for help. This was in response of that remark. Take is easy. It is pointed at one idiot and not at china.
 
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