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India is losing the race: NY Times

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By steven rattner :As recently as 2006, when I first visited India and China, the economic race was on, with heavy bets being placed on which one would win the developing world sweepstakes.

Many Westerners fervently hoped that a democratic country would triumph economically over an autocratic regime.

Now the contest is emphatically over. China has lunged into the 21st century, while India is still lurching toward it.

That’s evident not just in columns of dry statistics but in the rhythm and sensibility of each country. While China often seems to eradicate its past as it single-mindedly constructs its future, India nibbles more judiciously at its complex history.

Visits to crowded Indian urban centers unleash sensory assaults: colorful dress and lilting chatter provide a backdrop to every manner of commerce, from small shops to peddlers to beggars. That makes for engaging tourism, but not the fastest economic development. In contrast to China’s full-throated, monochromatic embrace of large-scale manufacturing, India more closely resembles a nation of shopkeepers.

To be sure, India has achieved enviable success in business services, like the glistening call centers in Bangalore and elsewhere. But in the global jousting for manufacturing jobs, India does not get its share.

Now, after years of rocketing growth, China’s gross domestic product per capita of $9,146 is more than twice India’s. And its economy grew by 7.7 percent in 2012, while India expanded at a (hardly shabby) 5.3 percent rate.
The New York Times

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China’s investment rate of 48 percent of G.D.P. — a key metric for development — also exceeded India’s. At 36 percent, India’s number is robust, particularly in comparison with Western countries. But the impact of that spending can be hard to discern; on a recent 12-day visit to India, not many rupees appeared to have been lavished on Mumbai’s glorious Victoria Terminus, also known as Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, since it was constructed in the 1880s. Parts of Mumbai’s recently built financial district — Bandra Kurla Complex — already look aged, perhaps because of cheap construction or poor maintenance or both. It’s hardly a serious competitor to Shanghai’s shiny Pudong.

China has 16 subway systems to India’s 5. As China builds a superhighway to Tibet, Indian drivers battle potholed roads that they share with every manner of vehicle and live animal. India’s electrical grid is still largely government controlled, which helped contribute to a disastrous blackout last summer that affected more than 600 million people.

Yet Morgan Stanley stands resolutely behind its 2010 prediction that India will be growing faster than China by the middle of this decade.

It isn’t going to happen, India’s better demographics notwithstanding.

For one thing, many of India’s youths are unskilled and work as peddlers or not at all. For another, despite all the reforms instituted by India since its move away from socialism in 1991, much more would have to change. Corruption, inefficiency, restrictive trade practices and labor laws have to be addressed.

Democratic it may be, but India’s ability to govern is compromised by suffocating bureaucracy, regular arm-wrestling with states over prerogatives like taxation and deeply embedded property rights that make implementing China-scale development projects impossible. Unable to modernize its horribly congested cities, India’s population has remained more rural than China’s, further depressing growth.

“China” and “corruption” may be almost synonymous to many, but India was ranked even worse in corruption in Transparency International’s annual Corruption Perceptions Index. At its best, the Indian justice system — a British legacy — grinds exceptionally slowly.

To be sure, summary executions don’t occur in India, and its legal system is more transparent and rule-based than China’s. But a recent visit coincided with the tragic gang rape of a young Indian woman that led to her death; the government’s ham-handed initial response was to ban protesters from assembling and impound vans with tinted windows like the one in which she was abducted.

India’s rigid social structure limits intergenerational economic mobility and fosters acceptance of vast wealth disparities. In Mumbai, where more than half the population lives in slums often devoid of electricity or running water, Mukesh Ambani spent a reported $1 billion to construct a 27-story home in a residential neighborhood.

Don’t get me wrong — I am hardly advocating totalitarian government. But we need to recognize that success for developing countries is about more than free elections.

While India may not have the same “eye on the prize” so evident in China, it should finish a respectable second in the developing world sweepstakes. It just won’t beat China.
A version of this article appeared in print on 01/20/2013, on page SR12 of the NewYork edition with the headline: India Is Losing The Race.

India Is Losing the Race - NYTimes.com
 
Yeah the race never ends but the gap is widening contrary to west's perceptions as mentioned in article.The indian dreams of becoming regional bully have shattered..
 
Yeah the race never ends but the gap is widening contrary to west's perceptions as mentioned in article.The indian dreams of becoming regional bully have shattered..

Atleast if not running beside China we are still growing rapidly unlike our hyper hitech developed neibhour who always serves their master as the alone cheerleader :D
 
@Chinese-Dragon I have learned one thing in life. Try to compete with best with all your efforts and hard work. Even if you can't catch up with them, you will at least will end up better than average person.

Success is a never ending process. More fast the competitor runs, more harder we will try and we will give everything.

That's why those who look behind, generally can't overtake the leader. They get content with what they have. And soon they themselves get overtaken.
 
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Currently, the gap is widening enormously in our favour.

Considering that our base economy is four times larger to begin with, and with a faster percentage growth rate too. Leading to a significant gap in actual GDP increase.

However the future is still uncertain. By declaring that the "race is over", the New York Times are counting their chickens too early.

Like General MacArthur declaring that they would win the Korean war easily, famously saying that they would be "home by Christmas". That of course went to Hell after the Chinese intervention, ending with the longest retreat in American military history.

No one can see the future.
 
This article says in its starting that in 2006 the whole world was looking at the start of a breathtaking racing competition between India and china but I would merely call it theatrics. Even at that time we were a decade behind china so even if there was a race; we were already a lap behind. All in all it was not a race, certainly not a close one.
Every country grows independently and not in response to other countries growth. Crudely written article with a bit of fact throwing and masala comparison.
 
India is just 5 years behind China and fast catching up, No worries for India, American media should instead concentrate on their own economic problems rather than creating animosity between India and China.
 
This widening gap has made India to take very tough decision and focus more on Education, R&D, Infrastructure development etc.

Everyone in India is shouting out loud about this widening gap and its forcing the Govt. TO do the needful.

China is actually helping us.

In any race, there are many contestants.

Should we not even to try to qualify for the final race ?

I would rather like an Indian running in final list of 100 mtr in Olympics even if he comes last, rather than not even qualifying to it.
 
So what exactly is the race about? ...and what is at the finish line? World Domination ?

What... World Domination? :lol:

I'm going to assume that you are joking. Even America the hyperpower could not achieve that.

The goal is to make a developing country with 1+ billion people into a "developed" country... Before the world's resources start running out...

World or regional domination is a fantasy.
 

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