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India to overtake China in 2020

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balbir pasha

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In the past decades, India has been world number one in starvation deaths, foreign aid and bribery. In the 2000s, it was transformed from a chronic under-performer to a potential superpower. Here are eight predictions of what it will look like in 2020:

India will overtake China as the fastest-growing economy in the world. China will start ageing and suffering from a declining workforce, and will be forced to revalue its currency. So its growth will decelerate, just as Japan decelerated in the 1990s after looking unstoppable in the 1980s. Having become the world's second-biggest economy, China's export-oriented model will erode sharply - the world will no longer be able to absorb its exports at the earlier pace. Meanwhile, India will gain demographically with a growing workforce that is more literate than ever before. The poorer Indian states will start catching up with the richer ones. This will take India's GDP growth to 10% by 2020, while China's growth will dip to 7-8%.

India will become the largest English-speaking nation in the world, overtaking the US. So, the global publishing industry will shift in a big way to India. Rupert Murdoch's heirs will sell his collapsing media empire to Indian buyers. The New York Times will become a subsidiary of an Indian publishing giant.

In the 2000s, India finally gained entry into the nuclear club, and sanctions against it were lifted. By 2020, Indian companies will be major exporters of nuclear equipment, a vital link in the global supply chain. So, India will be in a position to impose nuclear sanctions on others.

India, along with the US and Canada, will develop new technology to extract natural gas from gas hydrates - a solidified form of gas lying on ocean floors. India has the largest gas hydrate deposits in the world, and so will become the biggest global producer. This will enable India to substitute gas for coal in power generation, hugely reducing carbon emissions and making Jairam Ramesh look saintly.

India will also discover enormous deposits of shale gas in its vast shale formations running through the Gangetic plain, Assam, Rajasthan and Gujarat. New technology has made the extraction of shale gas economic, so India will become a major gas producer and exporter. Meanwhile, Iran's mullahs will be overthrown, and a new democratic regime will usher in rapid economic growth that creates a shortage of gas in Iran by 2020. So, the Iran-India pipeline will be recast, but in reverse form: India will now export gas to Iran.

More and more regions of India will demand separate statehood. By 2020, India will have 50 states instead of the current 28. The new states will not exactly be small. With 50 states and a population of almost 1.5 billion, India will average 30 million people per state, far higher than the current US average of 6 million per state.

China, alarmed at India's rise, will raise tensions along the Himalayan border. China will threaten to divert the waters of the Brahmaputra from Tibet to water-scarce northern China. India will threaten to bomb any such project. The issue will go to the Security Council.

Islamic fundamentalists will take over in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The US will withdraw from the region, leaving India to bear the brunt of consequences. Terrorism will rise in India, but the economy will still keep growing. How so? Well, 3000 people die every year falling off Mumbai's suburban trains, and that does not stop Mumbai's growth. Terrorism will bruise India, but not halt its growth.
 
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I think this decade is vital for India's growth ..Indians will enjoy more and more benefits of the economic reform in this decade and more power plants and better infrastructure will complete in this decade..but to be realistic i dont think we cannot overtake China ..because it is also growing but we can give her stiff competition ..
 
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China will start ageing and suffering from a declining workforce, and will be forced to revalue its currency. So its growth will decelerate, just as Japan decelerated in the 1990s after looking unstoppable in the 1980s.

May be in 30 years if one child policy remains but not in 10. Chinese can increase rate of birth when ever they want too , in Japan No one wants babies any more just too busy at work.
 
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india cant take china by 2020
since we will be developing and tey will be developed
 
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Good article but facts exaggerated at few places ......
 
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this decade will belong to china no doubt in tat

it will 2020 tat india will start to compet with chinese markets and will give tough fight

and then oly in 2030 we will see india developed fully but in the end its all speculations so we will have to wait and watch coz we cant predict the future
 
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We need to grow averagely at a rate of 10-12% per annum with a major chunk of resources allocated to infrastructure.Fairly our infrastructure sucks
 
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NEW DELHI: "Made in India" could be the next big economic story with the country challenging China's position as the leading global
manufacturing hub within five years, says a new report.

Right now China is the favourite choice for outsourcing manufacturing while India is preferred for information technology, finance and customer services, said Capgemini, Europe's largest computer consultancy.

But "there's a very keen interest in moving more manufacturing to India," said Roy Lenders, vice-president at Capgemini Consulting Services and the report's author.

In fact, "India could challenge the position of China as the manufacturing centre of the world in the next three to five years," Lenders said, citing a survey of 340 mainly Fortune 500 global manufacturing companies.

"What surprised us was when we asked about their plans for the next three or four years, they said outsourcing manufacturing (to India) was a higher priority than outsourcing back office work," he said in a telephone interview from Utrecht in the Netherlands.

"If we look at the respondents' plans for the coming years, manufacturing will become the number one activity to be off-shored to India," Lenders said, with lower costs the key factor driving the trend.

"The results in favour of India were overwhelming," he said. In fact, manufacturing outsourcing looks set over coming years to surpass India's flagship IT and business process outsourcing activities in importance, he said.

Right now, China's share of the world's manufacturing exports is more than eight percent while India stands at just under one percent.

But "the interest of global manufacturers in manufacturing in India is very high compared to China. In terms of trend there will definitely be a move. China has a reason to be worried," Lenders said.

However, India must improve its infrastructure with nearly half of the firms surveyed that had already outsourced manufacturing to India complaining about a lack of manufacturing and supply chain infrastructure.

India's ramshackle infrastructure of potholed roads, dilapidated ports, shabby airports and erratic power is regularly cited as an obstacle to economic growth along with the maze of red tape.

It has already taken some steps to promote an export-led manufacturing boom by setting up special economic zones or SEZs -- havens of economic freedom that drove China's industrialisation.

But even more "substantial investments" need to be made, Lenders said. The lead factor driving India's new manufacturing popularity is price, he said. Some of the main manufacturing sites in China are becoming too pricey.

Chinese manufacturing wages are 250 to 350 dollars a month whereas they average 100 to 200 dollars per month or lower in Thailand and other parts of Asia. In India factory jobs start at 60 dollars a month.

Analysts often point to South Korea's Hyundai Motor's one-billion-dollar car plant in the southern city of Chennai which opened in 1998 and turns out thousands of export-bound cars annually as an example of what could be the future for the Indian economy.

Hyundai has been moving production of its smallest cars to India to exploit lower costs. Now other firms have followed suit.

India's Auto Components Manufacturing Association expects global sourcing of parts from the country will double to 5.9 billion dollars next year and hit 20 billion dollars in seven years.

All the international players "are looking at India as the new sourcing hub," said association vice-president JC Chopra. Others setting up manufacturing facilities in India include Finnish telecom leader Nokia, South Korean steel heavyweight POSCO and US computer giant Dell.

And the companies don't only have their eyes on foreign markets. India's huge domestic market of 1.1 billion people is also a draw along with its push to boost infrastructure.

"India is building like hell, improving its infrastructure, so a lot of suppliers would like to be there," said Lenders.

'Made in India' rising to challenge China: Report - India - The Times of India
 
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The article Posted first shows only optimism but a lot of work needs to be done still :cheers: but sooner or later that would be the eventual result. The wheel of life will keep turning.

America..Russia...China...India... Who know who's next big success ?

And glad that things are surely moving in the right direction for Us.
 
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Chinese manufacturing wages are 250 to 350 dollars a month whereas they average 100 to 200 dollars per month or lower in Thailand and other parts of Asia. In India factory jobs start at 60 dollars a month.
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If cheap labor is the key,then Somalia will be the World Factory .:lol:
 
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Well well well, India overtake China in 2020 ?

Let me remind you wet dream don't last long !

A little reality check for my Indian friends;

HongKong, My hometown, a tiny modern city of China will be serve

as an example of heaven and hell;


Population: 7 million,

poverty:NIL


GDP (purchasing power parity):
$307.3 billion (2008 est.)

country comparison to the world: 40
$300.1 billion (2007 est.)
$282.1 billion (2006 est.)
note: data are in 2008 US dollars

GDP (official exchange rate):
$215.4 billion (2008 est.)

GDP - real growth rate:
2.4% (2008 est.)
country comparison to the world: 147
6.4% (2007 est.)
7% (2006 est.)

GDP - per capita (PPP):
$43,800 (2008 est.)

country comparison to the world: 15
$43,000 (2007 est.)
$40,600 (2006 est.)
note: data are in 2008 US dollars

Reserves of foreign exchange and gold:
$182.5 billion (31 December 2008 est.)

country comparison to the world: 8
$152.7 billion (31 December 2007 est.)

Debt - external:
$659.9 billion (31 December 2008)
country comparison to the world: 16
$711.1 billion (31 December 2007)

Stock of direct foreign investment - at home:
$1.241 trillion (31 December 2008 est.)
country comparison to the world: 3
$1.178 trillion (31 December 2007 est.)

Stock of direct foreign investment - abroad:
$776 billion (31 December 2008 est.)
country comparison to the world: 6
$1.011 trillion (31 December 2007 est.)

Now please compare India's data from my link, you will get a

good wake up call for your wet dream

https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/
:smitten::pakistan::china:
 
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Gasht, brother, cool down, cool down. Do not get provoked please. They will make your post an excuse, why are you helping them make an excuse for them to report mods?

Edit it brother, please.
 
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