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5G deployment in India will happen in line with global timeline: Huawei

Could be several reasons. Private institutions in India may be looking at profitability and market share and rather open other industries. China did not create those industries when they were 3 trillion GDP. India is at 3 Trillion is yet farther along than China at this level of GDP in many sectors than China was at a similar stage.


A majority of Chinese tourist is its own people they count. Moving back and forth between mainland and Hong kong and Taiwan. When anyone comes from HK or Taiwan they include that in their tourist numbers
India is 3 trillion GDP????
Oh, I'm sorry, I forgot. The mouth of the Indian.
 
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We Buy Things with our money. Unlike bankrupt nations. Who gets it in the name of AID

The question why supa power arent capable.

What does it have to do with aids.

Could be several reasons. Private institutions in India may be looking at profitability and market share and rather open other industries. China did not create those industries when they were 3 trillion GDP. India is at 3 Trillion is yet farther along than China at this level of GDP in many sectors than China was at a similar stage.


A majority of Chinese tourist is its own people they count. Moving back and forth between mainland and Hong kong and Taiwan. When anyone comes from HK or Taiwan they include that in their tourist numbers

horsesh1t.

I am asking why arent indians making telecommunication equipments like Huawei and ZTE.

What does have to do with GDP :)

BTW India's GDP is at 2.2 trillion. Stop making up figures :D
 
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Make up your mind. I dont hold dual nationality.

BTW why arent supa powder indians making telecommunication equipment ?

BTW, what is happening to your president? Did you get a new ruler to govern your country?
We are not making new equipment, because, we have money to buy one and use it?? Does it help you to soothe your ego???
 
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Yet here in PDF, we have south asians making statements about chinese workers while there is little job creation in India :) Its from the economist? Fake news? :)

A DOZEN hefty wooden crates sit outside a small factory on the outskirts of Lucknow, the capital of India’s most populous state, Uttar Pradesh. On the shop floor inside, where chattering machines bag and package herbal teas, a manager explains what will happen when he opens the crates. “His job will go,” he says, nodding at one boiler-suited operator. “And his over there, and that one’s too.”

Improved technology has already boosted the firm’s output fivefold since its launch in 2002, with no increase in staff. The new machines in the crates, which require a single operator rather than three, will double it again. But the manager insists that, as in the past, he will somehow find jobs for everyone—as drivers or even watchmen if necessary.

Few Indian workers have such conscientious employers. They do, however, increasingly face similar risks of redundancy, or of failing to find a decent job in the first place. A big part of the challenge stems from automation. According to McKinsey, a consulting firm, machines could eliminate some 52% of India’s jobs if current technology were adopted across the board. This affects not only manufacturing. For the first time in nearly a decade, India’s high-flying IT industry this year laid off thousands of workers. A survey of private-sector workers by the Economic Times, an Indian daily, found 62% agreeing that their job prospects were shrinking.

India’s labour force will soon overtake China as the world’s largest, but the country is struggling to generate opportunities for a workforce with the wrong skills. Slowing economic growth, a decline in investment rates, the shock of economic reforms, a long-term decline in agricultural employment and a faulty education system have combined to reduce the proportion of Indians who hold proper jobs.

India is also in the midst of a demographic transition, as birth rates fall. The share of the population that is of working age is peaking relative to the share of children and old people. That should, as long as jobs are available, lift the rate of economic growth. Yet the proportion of working-age people actually in work has been falling steadily (see chart). India, home to a sixth of humanity, is in danger of forfeiting its “demographic dividend”.

The numbers are daunting. Just to keep unemployment in check, India needs to create some 10m-12m jobs a year. When economic growth is strong, it has just been able to do that: the government’s Labour Bureau estimates that from 2013 to 2015 the economy added 11m jobs a year. A slowdown in the prior two-year period, however, had kept job growth at half that level, leaving a shortfall of 10m jobs. The tipping point seems to be economic growth of about 7%. Ominously, growth has steadily slowed since 2016; in the quarter ending in June it fell to 5.7%, although transitory factors may have played a part in that.

The data on jobs are also unreliable. Officially, India’s jobless rate has hovered at an enviable 4% for many years. But the government is generous in its definition of work. By its own admission, some 35% of workers in 2015—the most recent year for which in-depth surveys are available—had held a job for less than 11 months in the previous year. According to the World Bank, over 30% of Indians between the ages of 15 and 29 are NEETs, “not in education, employment or training”.

This may be an exaggeration. In a country where some 86% of workers are reckoned to be in “informal” employment—ie untaxed and without a contract—counting can be difficult. But the pressure for jobs is real. Last year thousands of Jats, a community in northern India that traditionally owned small farms but has become increasingly urbanised, rioted to press demands for an expanded quota of government jobs. The unrest left 25 dead and briefly severed the main water supply to Delhi, India’s capital. Other castes and ethnic groups have taken similar action in recent years, in the same hope of strong-arming their way into jobs.

Successive Indian governments have tried to tackle the dearth of employment. One massive state program, the world’s largest, doles out millions of temporary make-work jobs in rural areas. The current government has also tried to boost skills. Last year its National Skill Development Corporation trained some 557,000 workers. By its own count, however, only 12% of these trainees found jobs. The central government has also promised to clarify India’s dauntingly complex labour rules: it says it will streamline compliance, and shrink some 44 different labour statutes into four simpler bundles.

The rules are indeed onerous. In many states, firms with more than 100 employees must seek government approval to fire a single worker. As a result, many resort to contractors to fill their payrolls with temporary hires, a solution that evades red tape but produces neither dedicated staff nor a happy workplace. Other companies simply choose to stay small: some 98.6% of non-farm businesses have fewer than 10 workers. This carries a long-term cost in productivity. Indian garment-makers, for example, tend to be tiny. Small wonder that competitors in such countries as Vietnam and Bangladesh, where giant factories are plugged into global supply chains, now far outpace India in exports.

India’s biggest industrial firms have found yet another solution. Surprisingly for a relatively poor country, their factories tend be more capital-intensive than those of their counterparts in China. For example, at a sprawling site outside the southern city of Chennai run by Hyundai, a South Korean firm, some 8,500 workers toil alongside 530 robots. The fully digitised facility turned out 661,000 cars last year, one every 72 seconds. It ranks second in productivity and quality among the firm’s 34 factories around the world; its engine plant is number one. “What we have here is an integrated cascade between suppliers and the assembly line,” says Ganesh Mani, the vice-president for production, “The entire ecosystem has to be in sync.”

Not all Indian workplaces can hope for such efficiency. But if the government does not do more to boost growth and to tip the balance between hiring people and installing robots, the jobs crunch will grow ever more severe. The problem requires not tinkering at the edges, but a concerted effort to put India’s economic ecosystem—from underfunded and poorly run schools, to a hopelessly clogged legal system, to ensnaring webs of red tape, to overburdened infrastructure—in sync.

https://www.economist.com/news/asia...nd-ever-more-indians-are-struggling-find-work
 
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Still thanks.

At least Indians admit oem... different from France.

Indian always admit the rise of China to the global ecosystem...And above all, culturally, China and its rise is not in conflict with India and our culture...
 
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BTW, what is happening to your president? Did you get a new ruler to govern your country?
We are not making new equipment, because, we have money to buy one and use it?? Does it help you to soothe your ego???

You are not even answering my question.

Seems like none of the indians here do.

No answer to the topic? Change the topic :)
 
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Oh, so what does this have to do with "India 3 trillion GDP"?
And I need to discuss the Modi "non monetization" ?

Could be several reasons. Private institutions in India may be looking at profitability and market share and rather open other industries. China did not create those industries when they were 3 trillion GDP. India is at 3 Trillion is yet farther along than China at this level of GDP in many sectors than China was at a similar stage.


A majority of Chinese tourist is its own people they count. Moving back and forth between mainland and Hong kong and Taiwan. When anyone comes from HK or Taiwan they include that in their tourist numbers
@AndrewJin @SOUTHie
hey friends, India is 3 trillion GDP?
 
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I gave you the answer. Private industry builds on market share and profitability and of course investment. We don't manufacture cell phones the U.S. Private industries in countries choose what they want to build. Theirs are investing elsewhere. Too cerebral for you to get it, but those are how decisions are made. As their per capita income grows they will move away from cheap Chinese garbage phones.
oh, but India is 3 trillion GDP?
The Ninth Wonder of the world - the mouth of the Indians.
 
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Why fixated on 3 trillion figure I threw out when the point is they far less than you. But you being 2nd highest if we are to believe the numbers.. are caught cheating on submissions to do with innovation and scientific papers :lol: The great wall of the chinese fraud

Fraud Scandals Sap China’s Dream of Becoming a Science Superpower


China- Officials admit to faking economic figures
Oh yes, considering that China's network coverage is up to 94%. We can find out any problems soon. So we rarely make false data. Because of the lack of concealment. It's different from your illiterate country.

so, India is 3 trillion GDP?
 
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I gave you the answer. Private industry builds on market share and profitability and of course investment. We don't manufacture cell phones the U.S. Private industries in countries choose what they want to build. Theirs are investing elsewhere. Too cerebral for you to get it, but those are how decisions are made. As their per capita income grows they will move away from cheap Chinese garbage phones.
What has making cellphone gonna do with telecommunication equipment. I am talking about base station switches.

Besides what kind of fake American are you. Motorola manufactures cellphone in the states. You must be on a VPN connection not to know that :)
 
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Why fixated on 3 trillion figure I threw out when the point is they far less than you. But you being 2nd highest if we are to believe the numbers.. are caught cheating on submissions to do with innovation and scientific papers :lol: The great wall of the chinese fraud

Fraud Scandals Sap China’s Dream of Becoming a Science Superpower


China- Officials admit to faking economic figures
OMG even India weapons use fake Chinese parts.

Fake Chinese spares for indigenised Bofors guns

But you should still thank China. Because the Saudi brothers testify - China's weapons are the top of the world. You should thank China for the help.

Saudis Use Chinese-made Cannons in Yemen

The PLZ-45 is a 33 ton artillery vehicle, with a 6.97 meter long cannon that fires guided and unguided 50kg 155mm shells up to 39 kilometers away (in contrast, the America M109A7 Paladin's shorter cannon has a 30km maximum range).

@Syama Ayas
 
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What has making cellphone gonna do with telecommunication equipment. I am talking about base station switches.

Besides what kind of fake American are you. Motorola manufactures cellphone in the states. You must be on a VPN connection not to know that :)
Why fixated on 3 trillion figure I threw out when the point is they far less than you. But you being 2nd highest if we are to believe the numbers.. are caught cheating on submissions to do with innovation and scientific papers :lol: The great wall of the chinese fraud

Fraud Scandals Sap China’s Dream of Becoming a Science Superpower


China- Officials admit to faking economic figures
It doesn't seem to be the only electronic device. India loves too much Chinese goods.

Chinese firm exports transistor chips for Indian locomotives

Exports eight-inch chips to India

CRRC Dalian obtains metro vehicle export order from Nagpur, India

China’s CRRC to provide 14 subway trains with 112 carriages to India

China’s high-speed train maker to get USD 30 billion for export push

China set to export trains for Mumbai Metro Rail project

China's leading train manufacturer starts operation in India

Kolkata Metro Unveils Design of CNR Dalian Trains

Chinese Corporation CRRC to supply coaches to Nagpur Metro

Chinese firm gets Rs 604 contract for Mumbai metro rail proj

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Line_1_(Mumbai_Metro)

and, Delhi metro escalator also comes from the Chinese company - Canny.

http://www.canny-elevator.com/en/new_info.aspx?newsid=956&NewsCateId=168

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Motorola's American dream is over
The point is there are market-driven decisions made by private players and the existing investment opportunities. too cerebral for you, give it up.



Why Alibaba Can't Complain About Its Return to the 'Notorious' Counterfeit Market List

First you said they dont but the fact reminds that they did.

Now you are telling me market forces and your truckload of horsesh1t BUT you still couldnt answer me question on a supar powder such as india fails to make any telecommunication equipment or rather carrier grade equipment :)

Stop changing the subject if you dont have the substance then dont answer :D
 
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First you said they dont but the fact reminds that they did.

Now you are telling me market forces and your truckload of horsesh1t BUT you still couldnt answer me question on a supar powder such as india fails to make any telecommunication equipment or rather carrier grade equipment :)

Stop changing the subject if you dont have the substance then dont answer :D
Motorola's American dream is over
The point is there are market-driven decisions made by private players and the existing investment opportunities. too cerebral for you, give it up.
Why Alibaba Can't Complain About Its Return to the 'Notorious' Counterfeit Market List
It's strange? India can't even make wind power equipment. It must be imported from China private enterprises.

China’s Sany Plans 1 GW Renewable Energy Capacity In India
 
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