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India salaries inch up, Chinese rise 11%

1. 5,000 CNY as the average! No special skills required. No special education background required
2. I'm a master and earn much more than that.
3. Are you sure a normal taxi driver can earn 30000 RS a month? I've been to India for three times, I visited Mumbai, Delhi and Chennai, all are modern part of India. I talked with my chauffeurs, and they told me they can earn in average earn RS 8000 to 9000 a month.
First class indians who have 4G and broadband network, can speak English and have access to tap water....

What saddens me in PDF is how little they care about those low-class citizens. From those keyboard warriors' narratives, I see no sympathy towards those who can't speak English and have no access to clean environment. It's a deeply divided society.

Hope their government can attend to their urban dwellers like how China's poorest province is doing to their poor "slum dwellers". And I also hope our indian members in PDF have some basic understanding of what's life of the poor like we do know about our underprivileged citizens.

The rebirth of Guiyang's urban slum

Before
52536174201008232342132416933306550_000.jpg


Now
664f5c10gw1f4n2ekt8hvj21kw0t049p.jpg



Hope their underprivileged people living in "sl**" can one day live in such environment with huge wetland parks, mountainous green land, first-class medical centres, best public education and shopping centres with provision of stable and decent jobs like what we are offering to our underprivileged citizens in China's poorest province.
 
What saddens me in PDF is how little they care about those low-class citizens. From those keyboard warriors' narratives, I see no sympathy towards those who can't speak English and have no access to clean environment. It's a deeply divided society.

When I was in Mumbai, I asked my chauffeur to drive me to some sl** in Mumbai, e.g. Dohobi Ghat. I took some pictures there. The pictures are now in my Baidu Cloud. But I will not post these pictures on PDF. I don't want to be banned.

I don't know how many bergs these poor sl** guys could earn in a month. Feel very sad whenever I though of the pictures there.
 
Many young Indian keyboard warriors have no idea how most their "unorganized sector" countrymen live their life.

Here is the life many Indian live:

"It's been two years since India emerged as the world's fastest-growing major economy, but the rapid expansion has done little to improve the lot of Ashok Kumar.

Parked up and sitting on the kerb, the 25-year-old truck driver is going nowhere fast. He is the sole breadwinner for the 13 people in his extended family and his monthly salary is stuck at $150."

http://in.reuters.com/article/india-economy-jobs-idINKCN11767R
Holy.....
Lorry drivers in China.....You know what I mean....
Lorry drivers inside city at least 4000 yuan per month with extra insurance and pension, normally 5000-6000yuan in Central China.
Those who drive on expressways from city to another....lol....I don't want to speculate their income

Let's have a look at their monthly salary in Hefei in Central China
Drive within cities

屏幕快照 2016-09-21 17-1.02.28.png


In my city Wuhan in Central China, we need more lorry drivers!
We have the biggest lorry driver exam centre in China.
You need 10,000 yuan tuition! And You have to wait for half a year!
I'm not joking....See the interview of Taiwan's TV channel TVBS in Wuhan

5000yuan at least.....can be 10,000yuan per month...
It takes less than 2 month to earn your tuition....

The best salary is those who drive interstate.....
It's not easy job, quite long-distance!
See those huge lorries on the expressway!
Northwest China
Southwest China
Central-Northwest China

When I was in Mumbai, I asked my chauffeur to drive me to some sl** in Mumbai, e.g. Dohobi Ghat. I took some pictures there. The pictures are now in my Baidu Cloud. But I will not post these pictures on PDF. I don't want to be banned.

I don't know how many bergs these poor sl** guys could earn in a month. Feel very sad whenever I though of the pictures there.
642774249@qq.com
Send me pls...
 
What saddens me in PDF is how little they care about those low-class citizens. From those keyboard warriors' narratives, I see no sympathy towards those who can't speak English and have no access to clean environment. It's a deeply divided society.


Indeed, as if they belong to two different countries. There are so many divides in Today's India, some traditional, like Religion, Caste, Language, some newly created, like formal/informal employment, quota, digital divide.

India has adapted open policy and market economy for more than 20 years, and we haven't seen a profound effort from any sector of Indian society to eradicate these divides, therefore, inclusive development remains as a slogan for the past quarter century.

While our Indian friends would cheer for any Indian progress in military and economic fronts, some are petty, we have not seen much of care of their less fortunate countrymen from Indian PDF members. "They are more than capable of standing on their on feet", some Indian members said.

I wish India the best, but I don't see any possibility that India would be as developed as China today in 30 years, let alone 15 as many Indian members would like to believe.
 
1. 5,000 CNY as the average! No special skills required. No special education background required
2. I'm a master and earn much more than that.
3. Are you sure a normal taxi driver can earn 30000 RS a month? I've been to India for three times, I visited Mumbai, Delhi and Chennai, all are modern part of India. I talked with my chauffeurs, and they told me they can earn in average earn RS 8000 to 9000 a month.



the poor truck driver should switch to drive a taxi. Some Indian friend here said taxi driver can earn much much more than that.

Fortunately you traveled to India before, otherwise we would be cheated by him. Thanks. Post some fotos of your visit, let's see India from your lens. :enjoy:
 
No offense,but every time i heared india , one word always flashs across:raping!
Sorry man but i can not help myself!!
 
India has a large population of low-end labor,and the government can't provide more jobs for these people,leading that average wage income is not too high.
 
India has a large population of low-end labor,and the government can't provide more jobs for these people,leading that average wage income is not too high.
China created 13 million jobs in 2016.

When you cannot provide education and employment to younger generations, so-called demographic dividend is demoncrazy poison. They are just useless food-eating gi**-ra*ing creatures wandering on the streets.
 
China created 13 million jobs in 2016.

When you cannot provide education and employment to younger generations, so-called demographic dividend is demoncrazy poison. They are just useless food-eating gi**-ra*ing creatures wandering on the streets.
We do not like indians follow our infrastructure and special economic zone developement policies,those are poisons of CCP.
Indians should follow USA Industry 4.0. That is the right way.
 
We do not like indians follow our infrastructure and special economic zone developement policies,those are poisons of CCP.
Indians should follow USA Industry 4.0. That is the right way.
They are.
USA has trump style MAKE-IN-MELIKA
Supa Powa 2012 has MAKE-IN-SUPA-POWA.
 
India's Mid-Year Economic Survey Says Fiscal Outlook Clouded
By
Anirban Nag
,
Archana Chaudhary
, and
Bibhudatta Pradhan
2017-08-11

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...r-economic-survey-says-fiscal-outlook-clouded
  • Warns about rising concerns from farm loan waivers by states
  • Flags deflationary pressures, calls for more monetary easing
800x-1.jpg

The problem is likely to get worse as populist farm loan waivers and other spending sprees pick up ahead of the general election in 2019.
Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg

India warned that fiscal slippages could be a drag on Asia’s third-largest economy in the year to March 2018, but pledged to meet its budget deficit targets as it sought to reassure investors and global rating companies.


The mid-year survey of the economy released by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s chief economic adviser, Arvind Subramanian, also called for interest rates to be lowered even further as India struggles with subdued private sector investment and a banking sector grappling with rising non-performing assets.


It cautioned that "anxiety reigns because a series of deflationary impulses are weighing on an economy yet to gather its full momentum." These include stressed revenues from the agricultural sector, farm loan waivers and declining profitability in the power and telecommunication sectors.


But it also pointed to optimism generated by structural reforms such as the introduction of the goods and services tax and the decision to privatize Air India. There is "growing confidence that macro-economic stability has become entrenched," the survey said.


"The economic survey is making the right noises in many places while at the same time it raises issues of fiscal uncertainty based on growth uncertainty,” said N.R. Bhanumurthy, Delhi-based economist at the National Institute of Public Finance. "Demonetization and GST implementation have caused structural changes in the economy," he said, noting the central bank was "taking a more calibrated view on inflation.”

800x-1.png

The central bank cut rates earlier this month to its lowest in seven years to boost the economy amid record low inflation. On Thursday, the central bank said it was paying a dividend of $4.6 billion to the government -- its lowest in five years -- putting New Delhi under pressure to achieve its budget targets through higher asset sales or cuts in subsidies.

India’s budget shortfall is forecast to be 3.2 percent of gross domestic product in the year to March 2018. While that would be smaller than the previous year’s 3.5 percent, it’s wider than the target of 3 percent. The government intends to hit that target next year, the economic survey said.

The federal government has slowly brought the gap down from 5 percent of GDP a few years ago. But the deficits are actually widening at the state level -- leaving India’s financial position essentially unchanged from 2012, before Modi took power. HSBC Holdings Plc forecasts the combined deficits of Indian states increased to 2.8 percent of gross domestic product in the year that ended in March 2017 from 2 percent during 2011 to 2014.

The problem is likely to get worse as populist farm loan waivers and other spending sprees pick up ahead of the general election in 2019.

Still Recovering

The $2 trillion economy is still recovering from Modi’s unprecedented cash ban imposed late last year. And while the introduction of the goods and services tax in early July went off smoothly, there are indications that India’s vast shadow economy -- which makes up for an estimated half of the country’s gross domestic product -- has been hurt by both the cash ban as well as the introduction of the sales tax.

Add to that underlying slack at factories, rising job losses and anemic loan growth could slow expansion before Modi faces re-election in 2019. His government has limited room to increase spending because it runs a bloated budget deficit, and room for monetary easing may close when the Federal Reserve starts reducing its balance sheet later this year.

A clutch of surveys from the Reserve Bank of India this month showed Indian factories were running at about 74 percent of capacity October-December, business sentiment in Indian manufacturing worsened April-June, consumer confidence dipped into the "pessimistic zone" in June, and more households expect prices to rise over the next three months after a record-low 1.5 percent reading in June.

— With assistance by Shruti Srivastava

images
 
India is a debtor country, and an agrarian country with living standards worst than Sub-Sahara Africa.

Unfortunately, China is adding an entire supa powa economy every 3 years (in 2017, a little more than one year).

Says Chinese who does not know that China consumes 3 dollars of debt to create 1 dollar of GDP... Hail the debt GDP ratio.....In 2007-08, China took about 6.5 trillion yuan (U.S. $993 billion) of new credits to pump up the economy by 5 trillion yuan (U.S. $764 billion) per year. In 2015-16, the economy needed 20 trillion yuan (U.S. $3 trillion) in loans to boost GDP by the same amount.
 

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