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If it is informal, then how do you even quantified those unemployed? I just showed you information from your own Indian sources. In that case, you can also assume India is 100% employed. I have a feeling you guys now the problem you are facing but choose to live in denial.
The CII is among those that have people on the ground that can check.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confederation_of_Indian_Industry
Founded in 1895, India's premier business association has over 8,300 members, from the private as well as public sectors, including SMEs and MNCs, and an indirect membership of over 200,000 enterprises from around 250 national and regional sectoral industry bodies.
So, unlike the govt, they are much more hands on.
Why is it wrong? How much you export defines how competitive your products and companies are. You were arguing that China does not have global companies. I just proved to you otherwise.
Oh really? You haven't understood what I said. Most of these new Chinese companies have come up and become international only now, within a protected growing economy.
I had made it clear quite sometime ago, India has a very low per capita economy with massive conglomerates that are capable of competing in the global arena. Imagine what they will be like in 15 years from now.
Here's one:
http://www.thehindu.com/business/In...billion-market-cap-by-2025/article7954691.ece
350 billion by 2025, that's the same size as Samsung today. Imagine what Tata will be like in 2030 or 2035. Same with Birla, Reliance etc.
Yes, as usual, live in that little cocoon of yours. Stick your head into the sand and pretend nothing is going to hurt you. How is India going to have Chinese advantage in automation which requires, hundreds of thousands of skilled operators, investment in machinery and robots, and also manufacturing base for those robots without first embracing the revolution?
Our goods are already cheaper in Indian markets despite having higher cost workers and tariff, imagine how much more competitive they would become with superior automation?
Your goods are cheaper because India did not have a national policy along with subsidies directed towards manufacturing.
You don't get it but automation is overall bad for China. If you replace your manufacturing labour with robots, what are you going to do about the millions of unemployed labourers? They are not trainable in any other field unlike the service industry chaps who have at least read a book in their life.
You don't realize it but China is not even among the top 10 manufacturers using automation. In fact, China wants to breach the top 10 by 2020. So, no, automation is not a threat to India, and particularly not from China.
I asked you for slumdog billionaires, these are not slumdogs. One is from a political family and the other a upper middle class family. I just proved to you India is economically controlled by the few dozen corporate families working with a corrupted crony capitalist state. Please prove me wrong?
This argument would fail among intelligent people.
China is a capitalistic, socialist, authoritarian government. We are not totalitarian, people are relatively free unless they want to overthrow the government.
Call it what you want. Only a few people control power in China. You get on the good side of those few people, you will monopolize the market.
Give it sometime.
http://www.cnbc.com/2017/01/10/here...meeting-with-alibabas-jack-ma-commentary.html
"Ma has probably gone as far as he can partnering solely with Chinese politicians and bureaucrats in that regard. As he himself has said on a number of occasions, there's only so far China can go economically with a central planning government trying to control too much."
What doesn't explain the startup boom? China also has a startup boom despite having a state dominated economy. So? Not sure how you define way ahead, China has larger successful startups compared to India.
Again, not enough for the size of the economy.
Take tech startups for example, UK is competing with India with similar economic size. But China should be competing with the US, not lag behind India.
Our argument was about whether age defines success for companies, I gave you Google and Microsoft and you insist they were both software companies. Then I gave you Intel, qualcomm, Xiaomi, DJI, SF all relatively young multi-billion companies, some hardware, some software, some logistics. So age does not defined success, most private Chinese companies are less than 30 years old, created after the 1980s economic reform, they became global giants in 3 decades, imagine where would they be in another 20 years?
That's not how it works. Tech companies come and go as directed by the market. They are not here to stay forever. If these companies stop innovating, they will disappear. But if they make something unique, they will dominate the market. So software companies like Microsoft and Google will disappear if something replaces their products. Hardware tech companies are the same, but much better placed. Qualcomm and Intel may dominate the market today, but if another company shows up with new technology, they will kick Qualcomm and Intel out.
Indian companies do not have many unique products. But they have vast experience and human resources that keeps them alive. This is what keeps companies alive for decades, even centuries if necessary because they can't be easily replaced. But this type of survival is what makes them a threat to purely tech oriented companies. Reliance Jio's juggernaut is the best example of this.
Give it a couple of decades, these companies will be absolutely gigantic, dominating an economy that will be equally gigantic and growing really fast. A real threat to the bubble companies in the tech segment that you have named.
No I would compare a skilled operator to an unskilled theoretical engineer. You don't seem to get the importance of vocational training with regards to industrial manufacturing prowess. You also don't seem to understand lower skilled Chinese workers are getting paid the same as your average IT engineers and these lower skilled workers are literate and can be up-skilled to operate more sophisticated systems.
It's you who don't seem to understand this. Indian graduates are being criticized because of a poor command of English, nothing else. Most Indians do not know English, yeah, this probably comes as a shock to you, but this is the case. The companies provide vocational training after candidates are recruited. What they are saying is there are not enough candidates who have mastered English enough to keep up with their trainers and peers.
90-95% of the GDP relies on non-English speakers.
Give them a machine they will work on it. Tell them to speak to an English speaking client from the West, they will fail. Services requires people to people contact, that's why some industries require English speaking people, which they do not get in enough numbers, especially with many of them leaving the country in large numbers as immigrants.
The Skill India program is precisely designed to train people to work on machines and such, so it does not leverage their English speaking skills, which is not really necessary to work in the manufacturing sector.
OTOH, India has 25% illiteracy and an unknown number of semi-literates. How are you going to provide jobs for them if not through manufacturing?
Services, man, services. India is a services dominated industry, 61%. The transfer of labour from agri to services is the highest. Manufacturing is being boosted as a secondary, quicker way to transfer labour, but the biggest job creator will still be services.
Also, in all your knowledge, you haven't considered that the people who will work in these industries are the youth. And the youth in India have very high levels of literacy. Over 90%. India's total literacy rate is lower because of the older members of the population, and training is irrelevant to them anyway.
That's what I am also telling you, we are SECOND only to India despite you saying we don't have a services based economy which I proved to you otherwise. Imagine a non-English speaking workforce exporting half your ITES exports and also having a large ITES market bigger than all your exports combined. Ignorance is bliss!
Meh, as I said, your economy is merely big. That's about it.
You are second to us only because India hasn't tapped markets that they should have done long ago. Particularly Japan. We export only 5% of our IT services to them.
Tech coolies are not worse than our 'sweatshops', but they are certainly paid not much better than them. LOL. The point is China and India need all the job we can find, not just low paid tech coolies. I want all jobs for Chinese, from the lower spectrum to the high. Understand? You need to create a million jobs a month just to keep your population employed, how many tech coolies can you employ? Also remember you have a 'demographic dividend' coming, LOL.
You don't get it. I posted a link some time ago in this thread, you should have read it. China has directed economic growth towards urban areas within the formal economy instead of helping expand the informal economy.
The point is not to give a farmer a city job, the point is to give the farmer a superior way of life. That's where India's efforts are directed towards.
So job growth is very different from improvement in quality of life. Why does a farmer need an alternate job when he is given free health care and free education? Instead he can use his income to boost consumption by purchasing goods, thereby giving rise to a new path for economic growth.
Secondly, Modi is not building a restaurant in order to employ cooks, like what China has done through investments. He is creating conditions which allows the cook to setup his own establishment, through self-employment.
http://www.cnbc.com/2016/11/16/india-entrepreneurship-is-at-an-all-time-high.html
India is witnessing a major growth in entrepreneurship — not because of its X factor but out of the need for its citizens to create their own job.
This is before Modi came to power.
http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report-51-of-indian-workforce-self-employed-survey-1850820
Around 51% of Indian workers are self-employed, mostly in rural areas, while 33.5% of them are casual labour (33.5%) and only 15.6% have salaried employment, an official survey revealed on Thursday.
"Among workers in rural areas, 54.2% are self-employed as against 41.1% in urban areas and 38.6% work as casual labour as against 17.5% in urban areas," India's chief statistician T.C.A. Anant told reporters here.
And this is post-Modi.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...jobs-self-employment/articleshow/47401164.cms
Among Class III towns - those with a population less than 50,000 - nearly 45% of male workers and over 50% of female workers were self-employed. In big cities with a million-plus population, the proportion of self-employed was about 36-38% for both men and women. Self-employed includes very small industrial or service sector units as well as shops.
I myself am self-employed. And let me tell you one thing about how I am taxed. A regular salaried employee is taxed on his entire income. Otoh, I am taxed only on half my income.
http://www.financialexpress.com/ind...employed-consider-these-tax-questions/364150/
Under the presumptive tax method filed in ITR-4S, self-employed professionals are allowed to claim expenses at the rate of 50% of the total income, and the income tax is calculated on the remaining 50% percent while adding any interest income to it. Under this method you are not required to separately show any proof of expense, and you are not required to maintain accounting records.
Cool, eh?
Self-employment is only possible in the services sector. And it is extremely difficult to calculate in statistics, so India will show a bad report when it comes to job growth when half the population is self-employed.
Even if they are protected, the market is still minuscule compared to China which is an economy 5x larger and much more sophisticated. Your ITES industry is tuned to be tech coolies servicing primarily English speaking countries. Do you know how big is the call center industry in China, all speaking in Mandarin?
Yeah, we have tech coolies servicing ourselves and others while you have tech coolies servicing only yourself. Big whoop.
And yet the 5% exported is half of your exports. How can it be irrelevant, we are concentrating on domestic consumption. Weren't you the one who keep on emphasizing that India is a domestic consumption based economy, then how does your largest industry not cater to your domestic market? Doesn't make sense isn't it?
Dude, this is irrelevant. You have half our exports because we haven't yet tapped your markets. And your domestic industry is already big, no denying it, but it's completely irrelevant because it doesn't affect India in any real way. Your IT companies do not compete in India, instead many of them have setup global R&D centers.
Even to tap the global market your biggest China companies need India. We don't need China for the same.
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...invests-rs-136-crore/articleshow/53875236.cms
"Some 1,000-odd techies, comprising engineers and network operations specialists at the GSC will deliver the gamut of network monitoring/management related services to clients in India and overseas markets," Huawei India CEO Jay Chen said Friday.
The global services centre is located within the same complex that now houses Huawei India's R&D centre, where some 3,000-odd techies are involved in software development/coding and associated R&D work.