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How far is India behind China

Ohh yea, Mighty China with a GDP per capita at US$ 5,184
While countries like little Denmark have $ 60.96
So try again, Mighty China :wave:

Can the Mighty Denmark build its own rocket?

So the Mighty Denmark is even above USA? :coffee:
 
Ohh yea, Mighty China with a GDP per capita at US$ 5,184
While countries like little Denmark have $ 60.96
So try again, Mighty China :wave:

it depends on how do you term "mighty",as a country or as an average individual,by your standard,the most "mighty" countries in the world are:
1 Luxembourg 122,272
2 Qatar 97,967

mighty Luxembourg and mighty Qatar
 
I think there is no real comparison. It is unfair to compare the two in anything else than population.
 
China's 2011 GDP = 7.3 trillion

Indian's 2011 GDP =1.85 trillion

The difference is still remaining 4 times, so let's see when India's GDP gonna hit 7 trillion. :coffee:

The World Development Indicators published by the World Bank reveal that India nearly doubled from a size of $460 billion in 2000 to $834 billion in 2005, and then more than doubled in the next five years to $1.72 trillion in 2010.

This is amazing.


The Indian economy has grown nearly fourfold in the last decade. :woot: :yahoo: :wave:
 
From economic point of view china is at climax while india is at foreplay. ;)
 
China crossed the $2 trillion mark only in 2005, that's six years before now. India is going to cross $2 trillion in 2012. India, economically is about 6-8 years behind China tops. Everything else is just D measuring.
 
We'd say that we're around 10 years behind in terms of planning and implementation. The one thing Chinese are really good at is the speed of implementing a project and completing it. That is what gives them such an advantage. We must learn.
 
Indian standard of schooling rank 2nd last in global test

Observing the high level of illiteracy, the constitution of India under article 45 made it obligatory on the government to achieve 100 per cent literacy within ten years from the enforcement of the constitution in 1950. The Article 45 also states that ‘the State shall endeavour to provide free and compulsory education for all children until they complete the age of fourteen years’. Cent per cent literacy, with free and compulsory education, in India should have become a reality by 1960 – isn’t it?


A tragedy for all Indians that the target set by the constitution to be achieved in 10 years in 1950 never became a reality even after 62 years! A country which has started from 20 per cent national literacy rate with 361.09 million populations in 1950 is still struggling at half-way mark 62 years later. In 2011 India has 74.04 per cent total literacy (82.12 % males and 65.46 % females), when we have a chunk of 1210.19 million populations, according to the provisional data from the census 2011.


On the contrary, India is propagated as ‘education powerhouse’ by the corporate world, based largely on the reputation of a few islands of academic excellence such as the IITs or IIMs. But scratch the glossy surface of our education system and the picture turns seriously bleak. We are just paper tigers.

Our fifteen-year-old Indians who were put, for the first time, on a global stage stood second to last, only beating Kyrgyzstan when tested on their reading, math and science abilities.

India ranked second last among the 73 countries that participated in the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), conducted annually to evaluate education systems worldwide by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Secretariat. The survey is based on two-hour tests that half a million students are put through.

China's Shanghai province scored the highest in reading. It also topped the charts in mathematics and science. China has been on top for last several years and it seems the country’s youngsters are unbeatable – they are far ahead than their counterparts.

"More than one-quarter of Shanghai's 15 year olds demonstrated advanced mathematical thinking skills to solve complex problems, compared to an OECD average of just 3 per cent" noted the analysis.

Our participants from Tamil Nadu and Himachal, showpieces of India's education and development, fared miserably at the PISA.

The average 15-year-old Indian is over 200 points behind the global topper. Comparing scores, experts estimate that an Indian eighth grader is at the level of a South Korean third grader in math abilities or a second-year student from Shanghai when it comes to reading skills.

The report said: "In Himachal, 11 per cent of students are estimated to have a proficiency in reading literacy that is at or above the baseline level needed to participate effectively and productively in life. It follows that 89 per cent of students in Himachal are estimated to be below that baseline level."

Clearly, India will have to ramp up its efforts and get serious about what goes on in its schools. "Better educational outcomes are a strong predictor for future economic growth," OECD secretary-general Angel Gurria told the media after the results was out.

"While national income and educational achievement are still related, PISA shows that two countries with similar levels of prosperity can produce very different results. This shows that an image of a world divided neatly into rich and well-educated countries and poor and badly-educated countries is now out of date."

In case of scientific literacy levels in TN, students were estimated to have a mean score that was below the means of all OECD countries, but better than Himachal. Experts are unsure if selecting these two states was a good idea.


The 93rd Constitution Amendment Bill 2001 enacting ‘free and compulsory education for all children is a fundamental right’ provided a ray of hope to millions of children in the age group of 6-14 years. The fundamental right to free education was received with paramount importance by all. But the irony of the fact is that the then BJP lead NDA government tried to garner all credit for the 93rd amendment and did little practically to enforce it for betterment of the children or nation.


Now, 10 years later, the Congress-led UPA government has pulling all stops together just to undo the hypothetical credit from the NDA with a new RTE Act of 2009. And in the process the government has paved the way for a bunch of ill-equipped degree holders across the country, thanks to the RTE Act, which legalizes education free of examinations and competition till 10+2 standard. According to the Act, 75 per cent children belonging to one kilometer radius of the institution have the right to take admission in the same institution even if they are unskilled.


I am happy that now there is accurate fact that lets people know how far we still have to go in the field of standard schooling. Remember, it is not the USA, UK, France or any other developed country from Europe or America that tops the list in consecutive years. It is the Asian countries that mostly on top of this standard education test. China, South Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore, Japan and Dubai are far better than us.

The better way out for us is to fight with our strongest but unfriendly neighbor – China, is that we need to fight and win our own educational battle at home.

I am afraid, how many of our education experts or people from Mr. Kapil Sibal’s office might have analyzed or at least gone through the PISA results? It is time to understand that children’s schooling must not be the part of a corporate world nor it can be the subject of political gimmicks between NDA and UPA governments.

Indian standard of schooling rank 2nd last in global test | ummid.com

How india gonna over take china with future generation like this ?:rofl:
 
Thanks for enlightening us. :pop:

You have earned your 50 cents for today, so go home and enjoy :coffee:

U Mad brah .... do U know how much wud be 50 US cent in China? It will be food for an entire chinese family... minus the chop-sticks!!!
its actually anythng between 0.1 yuan to 0.5 yuan.
even by that income , in their lifetime, most chinese members on this forum will only able to afford a second hand push bike.
but the good side is , at least they are healthy , unlike the 60-70% of dirty chinese rivers...

o chakk te phatte !!!!
 
China's 2011 GDP = 7.3 trillion

Indian's 2011 GDP =1.85 trillion

The difference is still remaining 4 times, so let's see when India's GDP gonna hit 7 trillion. :coffee:

7 years ago, China's GDP and per capita resembled that of today's India.

China GDP per capita (2004): $ 1486
India GDP per capita (2011): $ 1527
IMF World Economics Outlook
So, on a per capita basis, India is about 6 to 7 years behind China.

Like I said in my previous post, both India and China will dominate the global economy and trade for most of this century. No doubt China will remain a larger economy than India, but both will be the engines of Asia, similar to what Germany (bigger) and France (bit smaller) have been to Europe in the previous century.
 
CHINA

Has whooped every nations *** in development these last 30 years.

ITS NO SHAME IN THAT.

they are no 2 in the world.

INDIA HAS DONE VERY WELL compared to every other country.

no 9 is no position to be scoffed at

BUT KEP GOING GROWING INDIA
 
India is never catching up. This is their so-called demographic dividend...

Ajay Shah's blog: The first PISA results for India: The end of the beginning

Das and Zajonc (2008) used results from Orissa and Rajasthan to create indices on mathematics performance similar to those of TIMSS (Trends in Mathematics and Science Study) and found these states near the bottom of the global rankings.

Educational Initiatives carried out an 18 state study using sophisticated testing instruments and found levels of performance on TIMSS comparable items that were stunningly lower. For instance on the open ended question "Write a fraction larger than 2/7" less than 30 percent of Indian students in standard 8 could answer correctly compared to more than 70 percent internationally.

The APRest study led by Karthik Muralidharan and Venkatesh Sundararaman in rural AP asked the same questions of students in grades 2 to 5 and found very slow rates of learning progress.
The results year after year from the ASER [2010 2009] study supported by Pratham find that significant fractions of students in Standard 8 cannot master even Standard 2 curricular basics. In rural areas nationwide a third of children in grade 8 could not do a simple division problem and almost 20 percent could not read a level 2 text. The 2011 results, due out in a few weeks will show continued stagnation or even retrogress in learning.

Numerous studies by MIT's JPAL, World Bank, NCAER/University of Maryland and other researchers found levels of performance that were shockingly low compared to curricular expectations.
 
I think India can never catch up China instead it will ruin itself and our children will have to rebuild the nation. Poor us.... Can any country nearby us help us at that time...... ;)
 
There is no comparison until China adopts democracy …their current system can achieve unachievable at rocket pace by paying hefty social price but we are abided with a law of democracy hence things don’t move that faster…but it is okay, we are happy….I have a power to say NO, if someone comes to grab my land!

So, it should be a level playing ground when it comes to comparison between two similar group countries...
 
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