below_freezing
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I'll try to explain India's model and its problems.
India's model was to let a small group of extremely well educated, high tech sectors lead its growth. In effect, services before manufacturing.
However, what India didn't realize was that manufacturing in and of itself will allow the manufacturer to learn technology! India promoted technologies related to services without technology related to manufacturing.
China, for example, is a world leader in lithium battery production, telecommunications equipment and industrial boilers. The technology required to make these items are immense - knowledge of solution phase chemistry, circuit design, electromagnetism, signal processing, optics, chemical process engineering, material science, fluid dynamics, thermodynamics, numerical programming, packaging and supply chain management. Just by making these 3 items, we are improving our science in chemistry and chemical engineering, electrical engineering, physics, mechanical engineering and computer science.
These are just 3 items. We produce millions more. Even producing a toy requires immense knowledge of control systems and polymer chemistry.
India on the other hand has put itself into services. Providing IT services only improves your IT sector, nothing else. This is especially apparent when you realize that the hardware that IT services are provided on are all made by others. After all, software without hardware is nothing, and people who know hardware usually know some software, but not the other way around.
In short, India did not allow manufacturing to take its entire technology sector forward. China has. This is the reason why we are ahead in this aspect.
Another aspect is, manufacturing needs many people. A large petrochemical reactor needs over 100,000 employees to operate. Chemists and chemical engineers, supply chain managers, mechanical engineers, IT services, down to truck drivers and floor sweepers, are all needed for the safe operation of a major petrochemical plant.
India's model was to let a small group of extremely well educated, high tech sectors lead its growth. In effect, services before manufacturing.
However, what India didn't realize was that manufacturing in and of itself will allow the manufacturer to learn technology! India promoted technologies related to services without technology related to manufacturing.
China, for example, is a world leader in lithium battery production, telecommunications equipment and industrial boilers. The technology required to make these items are immense - knowledge of solution phase chemistry, circuit design, electromagnetism, signal processing, optics, chemical process engineering, material science, fluid dynamics, thermodynamics, numerical programming, packaging and supply chain management. Just by making these 3 items, we are improving our science in chemistry and chemical engineering, electrical engineering, physics, mechanical engineering and computer science.
These are just 3 items. We produce millions more. Even producing a toy requires immense knowledge of control systems and polymer chemistry.
India on the other hand has put itself into services. Providing IT services only improves your IT sector, nothing else. This is especially apparent when you realize that the hardware that IT services are provided on are all made by others. After all, software without hardware is nothing, and people who know hardware usually know some software, but not the other way around.
In short, India did not allow manufacturing to take its entire technology sector forward. China has. This is the reason why we are ahead in this aspect.
Another aspect is, manufacturing needs many people. A large petrochemical reactor needs over 100,000 employees to operate. Chemists and chemical engineers, supply chain managers, mechanical engineers, IT services, down to truck drivers and floor sweepers, are all needed for the safe operation of a major petrochemical plant.