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best interview with the Dalai Lama i've seen , explains the entire china-tibet scenario , more impotently about Dalai Lama himself :smitten:he's got a new fan now

Very fake news, western propaganda, trump said it thousands of times
 

best interview with the Dalai Lama i've seen , explains the entire china-tibet scenario , more impotently about Dalai Lama himself :smitten:he's got a new fan now
He just destroyed Chinese argument on Tibet. @Oscar must watch.
 
its funny because up until the late 60 tibet was viewed as occupied territory by USA

And same as what India view Tibet in 60s that's why the 62 drama has happened :lol:

He just destroyed Chinese argument on Tibet. @Oscar must watch.

He can bullsh1t what ever he wants, bottom line he will never got back to Tibet.
 

Essential Tibet Travel (China) Beautiful Views: What to Know Before You Go #1
AstaTravelling
Published on Mar 5, 2017
Essential Tibet Travel (China) Beautiful Views: What to Know Before You Go #1

Tibet located in China

As entering from Nepal requires the Chinese Visa, you have first to get the permits, then on arrival in Nepal to process the China Visa through the travel agent handling your tour. ...
 
Tibet is beautiful ,it would have been such a great place with Dalai lama in Tibet.
hope he and his followers return soon.

Wet dream :disagree:, India can keep them and make sure your government well feed and well clothed them and they should have better living standard than average Indians:D, that what we Chinese wish for them... India should make sure they are treated well or India's image will be tarnished :lol:
 
To Counter PM Narendra Modi's 'Make In India' Programme, China Has A Plan

Beijing: Increasing competition from India in foreign investment and a dwindling foreign exchange reserves has forced China to review its age-old practices.

President Xi Jinping has vowed that Beijing will continue to liberalise its economy on all fronts as his country finds its forex reserves - the world's largest - dip below USD 3 trillion, sparking concerns among Chinese policymakers.

With a renewed focus on Foreign Direct Investment or FDI, China is expected to aggressively vie with India for investments abroad. In the past few years, India has become a major destination for FDI under Prime Minister Narendra Modi's flagship 'Make In India' programme.

ALSO ON MSN: China opens Tibet’s 2nd largest airport terminal near Arunachal Pradesh

According to a Financial Times report, "In 2015, India was for the first time the leading country (USD 63 billion) in the world for FDI, overtaking the US (which had USD 59.6 billion of greenfield FDI) and China (USD 56.6 billion)."

Mr Jingping's remarks assume significance as China has been loosening its grip on foreign capital inflows, and reducing restrictive measures and opening more sectors.

Yesterday, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang in a government work report detailed "unprecedented" opening-up measures to the outside world under its flagship 'Made in China' initiative.

ALSO READ: China equates Azad Kashmir, Taiwan

"Foreign firms will be treated the same as domestic firms when it comes to licences applications, standard setting, government procurement and will enjoy same preferential policies under Made in China 2025 initiative," Mr Li said.

Foreign firms will be able to get listed on China's stock markets and issue bonds. They will be allowed to participate in national science and technology projects, he said.

China has been trying several measures to keep the economy floating and struggling to keep the growth rate steady. It has moderated its economic growth forecast for 2017 to "around 6.5 per cent" from the 6.7-7 per cent it had targeted last year.

This year's target is below expectations and signals that China is likely to embrace risk-control over short-term growth. Last year, China achieved a full-year growth of 6.7 per cent - its weakest since the 1990s.

http://www.msn.com/en-in/news/newsi...-a-plan/ar-AAnUcMZ?li=AAaeRVN&ocid=spartanntp
 
Chinese are no match to rising Indian FDI as they themselves are investing for profits in other countries.
 
I see no reason for competition.

There is room for both nations to grow.
 
Foreign direct investment, net inflows (BoP, current US$)

upload_2017-3-7_16-40-19.png


Foreign direct investment, net inflows (% of GDP)
upload_2017-3-7_16-41-1.png


FDI as percentage of the GDP in China is declining while in India it is rising as of 2015.

Of course, a smaller percentage of FDI-to-GDO in China is still much larger than it is in India given that Indian GDP is much smaller.

Besides, China is not short of FDI and has always been one of the top destinations for high-end investment.
 
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To Counter PM Narendra Modi's 'Make In India' Programme, China Has A Plan

Beijing: Increasing competition from India in foreign investment and a dwindling foreign exchange reserves has forced China to review its age-old practices.

President Xi Jinping has vowed that Beijing will continue to liberalise its economy on all fronts as his country finds its forex reserves - the world's largest - dip below USD 3 trillion, sparking concerns among Chinese policymakers.

With a renewed focus on Foreign Direct Investment or FDI, China is expected to aggressively vie with India for investments abroad. In the past few years, India has become a major destination for FDI under Prime Minister Narendra Modi's flagship 'Make In India' programme.

ALSO ON MSN: China opens Tibet’s 2nd largest airport terminal near Arunachal Pradesh

According to a Financial Times report, "In 2015, India was for the first time the leading country (USD 63 billion) in the world for FDI, overtaking the US (which had USD 59.6 billion of greenfield FDI) and China (USD 56.6 billion)."

Mr Jingping's remarks assume significance as China has been loosening its grip on foreign capital inflows, and reducing restrictive measures and opening more sectors.

Yesterday, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang in a government work report detailed "unprecedented" opening-up measures to the outside world under its flagship 'Made in China' initiative.

ALSO READ: China equates Azad Kashmir, Taiwan

"Foreign firms will be treated the same as domestic firms when it comes to licences applications, standard setting, government procurement and will enjoy same preferential policies under Made in China 2025 initiative," Mr Li said.

Foreign firms will be able to get listed on China's stock markets and issue bonds. They will be allowed to participate in national science and technology projects, he said.

China has been trying several measures to keep the economy floating and struggling to keep the growth rate steady. It has moderated its economic growth forecast for 2017 to "around 6.5 per cent" from the 6.7-7 per cent it had targeted last year.

This year's target is below expectations and signals that China is likely to embrace risk-control over short-term growth. Last year, China achieved a full-year growth of 6.7 per cent - its weakest since the 1990s.

http://www.msn.com/en-in/news/newsi...-a-plan/ar-AAnUcMZ?li=AAaeRVN&ocid=spartanntp

China is totally on the back foot and we see that first time Chinese economic policies are reactive in nature compared to proactive earlier. China knows this and that is why they themselves are willing to Invest in India. India will be the new factory of the world. It will not produce low tech consumer goods but all sort of high tech goods including high tech defense weapons and planes.

According to a Financial Times report, "In 2015, India was for the first time the leading country (USD 63 billion) in the world for FDI, overtaking the US (which had USD 59.6 billion of greenfield FDI) and China (USD 56.6 billion)."

This is important. We need more and more FDI as well as domestic Investment. We need to spend money in R & D as well to emerge as a R & D hub of the world.
 
wow, another thread created to deliberately humiliate India, so many anti-india false flaggers!

This is exactly what I meant in my reply to the thread about Russians and Chinese being most optimistic about their future. As you can see, Indians can be equally optimistic with little to back it by way of facts and figures.

This tends to happen when people blindly accept the government narrative at face value.
 
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