All I see is inferiority complex.
http://www.livemint.com/Money/JYalq...ndias-youth-not-in-employment-shows-OECD.html
Over 30% of youth aged 15-29 in India are not in employment, education or training (NEETs). This is more than double the OECD average and almost three times that of China.
That's like the situation in Arab countries before the Arab Spring uprising, young unemployed and angry. That's why you see those rape cases skyrocketing. When they see a female working in a call center, robbing off their jobs, it pissed them off.
They all got rich first in a protected market, then they are competing. That isn't competing.
Does it market how we got there? Now they are competing with the world. Where is India except for services outsourcing and maybe cheap generics?
No, it won't work for quite sometime. As I said, automation has sunk costs which needs to be made up first. While at the same time competing with cheaper labour that's readily available.
The Chinese have more to fear from these large business houses than Indians do because that's where these large conglomerates will focus on, the export market.
It won't work? The global market for robotics and automation is a few hundred thousand robots a year, worth almost 100 billion $. Well if you insist Indians have nothing to fear without providing me any substantial facts, then I rest my case. What is there to fear? You move on and face the competition, you automate your processes and remain relevant. That is exactly what China is doing, we are the worlds largest robotics and automation market. You seem to think India is safe living in a little cocooned shell.
https://qz.com/922742/china-is-rapi...-will-one-day-manufacture-everything-you-buy/
China is already the world’s largest producer of industrial robots,
supplying about 27% of the global market since 2015, according to the International Federation of Robotics (IFR). It’s also the largest buyer of robots.
BS as usual.
http://www.livemint.com/Companies/PbdzOUOXCC5M2pVKlRQOaJ/How-many-billionaires-are-self-made.html
Data shows that 63% of India’s billionaires are self made, and their wealth accounts for about 49% of the total wealth of billionaires in the country
Monopoly by business families is a threat to China, not India. In India, the political system is so chaotic and the judicial system so strong that all the rich and upcoming rich are in the same soup. In China, you join CCP and you will dominate the market, while also killing competition.
These billionaires came from well connected rich families, they were already millionaires before becoming billionaires. Tell me one slumdog in the billionaire league.
Contrast that to Chinese billionaires, all were non-existent 20 years ago,Ma Yun is the best example, he was a jobless English teacher for gods sake. He is the real self made billionaire. Wang Tao of DJI was a freaking engineering nerd from a farming family.
I know there is corruption in China, but can you tell me which family business is dominating which particular industry in China? All I know is strategic industries like power, telecoms, etc are all dominated by SOEs, and that too for the precise reason of ensuring no private domination and monopoly of strategic industries.
In India, the crony capitalism is chronic, working in tandem with a chaotic democracy. Your democracy is controlled by family dynasties, who in turn work with the business dynasties, their cronies.
In all, 16 of today’s top 20 business groups are products of the post-independence economic growth. They now account for two-third of the combined assets and nearly 70 per cent of the combined revenues of the top 20 in FY16.
http://www.rediff.com/money/report/...business-groups-are-family-owned/20160818.htm
In the US also, the democratic system with a strong judiciary ensures the rise of new self-made billionaires every year, the same as in India.
You are living in lalaland comparing US to India. The only common thing is the word democracy. Yours is a corrupted incompetent democracy, whereas the US is a less corrupted but functioning democracy.
They are software companies, not hardware.
DJI is software? What about Xiaomi? All new 'hardware' companies worth billions. SF express? Logistic company worth billions. Intel was only founded in the 70s. Qualcomm, again founded in the 80s. If age was a measure of success, TATA would have been the next Intel.
Yeah, many of the call center employees are engineers. Most of them have a minimum of bachelor degrees in other fields as well.
You can't seem to understand the difference between vocational training and a degree.
http://indiatoday.intoday.in/education/story/vocational-education-engineering/1/721469.html
Recent studies show that barely 7 per cent of the approximate 1.5 million Indian engineers released into the job market every year are employable. The glaring problems giving rise to this issue is the lack of proper skills in the graduating engineers.
Traditionally, our education system doesn't pay much importance to skill-building, but only paper degrees," states Bharwani. "In order to ensure employable education, skill enhancement must take place very early in the education of the students."
Vocational education is a skill-centric job-based education which prepares a person for a particular trade or craft in a certain industry.
You expect these geniuses with no vocational training to operate machines in weeks. Jai hind!
India's services sector is growing in double digits. 3/4ths of India's growth has come from the service sector.
No, you don't really need to have this balance. None of the advanced economies have this balance that you speak of. In the US, the service sector is 80% of the GDP. The fears of a middle income trap doesn't exist for India because of India's strength in the service sector.
That's why they are known as advanced economies genius, India is not one, understand? You still have 50% farmers and x% of illiterates who need mass employment. Therefore, you need to balance it with both manufacturing and services. Get it genius? India does not need to fear middle income trap, India needs to fear low income trap, meaning you need to start educating your poor and starving brethren, before they figure out to start a revolution ala Arab Spring.
Much better than cheap sweatshops where you don't need an education at all.
If you define having a pay of 500-600 USD$ a month with a dormitory and canteen food as sweatshop, whereas an average high caste IT engineers earn 3.6 lakh a year(450$/month), so be it. But remember we need as many 'sweatshops' and high tech jobs we can get. If you don't want them, no worries bhai, give it to us. Btw, I wouldn't call a 99% literate China having no education, compare this with your other 25% illiterate Indians.
Read this article.
http://www.business-standard.com/ar...t-breaks-cultural-barrier-117031700763_1.html
If all we know is English, I wonder why the Japanese are tapping into India then.
You do know the largest Chinese IT export market is Japan right? There is a reason for it.
BS. China's IT service exports are not even half of India's.
In fact China is a net importer of services. India has a trade surplus when it comes to services. Our superiority in services is recognized even by the Japanese.
Where am I bullshiting, we do have a software export market of roughly 50bil usd$, you think software is just about outsourcing tech coolies? It includes embedded software and chip design. We are the second largest ITES exporter after India.
http://www.prnewswire.com/news-rele...ta-2017---research-and-markets-300458305.html
In addition, the export of the application software industry developed in stability. In 2016, the export of Chinese software industry reached USD 51.9 billion,
In 2016, the application software industry in China run well with revenue of CNY 4.9 trillion,
Do the math and calculate the size of the market, it's bigger than your whole exports combined.
The reason you have a surplus is because your domestic market is underdeveloped, you have no demand for more sophisticated services, therefore, you can only export your services.
Irrelevant to India. It's merely the size of China's market, nothing else.
Yes, but then again, irrelevant to India.
Merely the size? How can it be irrelevant when I am comparing the size of the Chinese IT market, thereby explaining to you the scale and sophistication of the Chinese market.
It is relevant to our argument, you are painting as if India is having a sophisticated services industry, the truth is India is having an acceptable quality low cost services industry dealing in English. That's is your advantage.
What do you mean? It's the exact opposite. Indians have not been talking and planning, that's why it's yet to make a mark in merchandise exports.
This is the first time that we are actually talking and planning.
Remember India Shining campaign? You have been talking and planning for decades. BJP was already planning to make India a manufacturing superpower back then to overtake China. See the world
'plan' and
'talk'.
You are using the wrong numbers. Just give it time, you will see for yourself.
India's economy will comfortably cross $2.5T this year, Dec.
How can I use wrong numbers when it comes from the CIA WORLD FACTBOOK. That's the most neutral source I can find.
You must be the genius considering we would have been doing that since long ago if that was the case. FDI picked up recently.
What is happening long ago is still happening today. Coincidently, Singapore and Mauritius are both the largest and second largest FDI source.
This will include blocking the Mauritius, Singapore and Cyprus channels used for re-routing of black money.
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...-strike-on-pakistan-/articleshow/58724130.cms
Dude, a still developing country is no longer attracting as much FDI as in the past.
A developing country who happen to be the third largest creditor nation with 3 trillion USD$ in reserves. Does it matter? We don't really need FDI to grow unlike India who needs it for survival, we can finance things domestically. Since last year, we are only about net 1bil US$ FDI recipient.
Yes, that's the objective of MII. The idea is to make stuff in India to sell to Indians, at best dominate neighbouring markets. The idea is to kill imports, not merely increase exports. We can think of exports much later for merchandise.
We have superiority in services, with a trade surplus, so that's where we are focusing on.
Good stay superior with services, earn that money and buy Chinese OK, even MADE IN INDIA Chinese goods OK. Stay proud of your Make In India, high tech screw driver and sticker industry.
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/info-tech/smartphone-manufacturing/article9370945.ece
This is all you have? Silly articles?
Ignore it at your own peril.
It is you who doesn't understand the reasons for both.
India is deriding the ratings agencies due to some other reason while China's was downgraded due to some other reason.
India was downgraded because of a screwed up national financial condition and China was downgraded for supposedly high corporate debt. Come to think of it India had almost always been slightly above junk grade.
When you compare two economies, you use percentages, not absolute figures.
Genius, you have to look at the base for comparison. Ex: Nigeria can have a 50% profit ratio for a 10 000$ shoe factory. India is at dirt base, yet you start boasting about profitability.
Demonetization was a really good success. Cash circulation is lower by 3-4T INR and inflation is below 4% and is set to reduce even more, a huge improvement considering BJP inherited double digit inflation. Banks were recapitalized using existing money, by a huge amount in fact.
I mean how do you define success? You screw up millions and the final results? Black money is still there, bank managers help to convert them to clean new bills. What exactly did you achieve at the expense of the poor?Corruption is still there, incompetency is still there. Inflation drop not because of BJP genius, it was RR who did it and also thanks to a falling oil price.
I can't believe you can still laugh considering you need FDI to stay afloat. It's just an easy flick to screw up India.
http://www.cfo-india.in/article/201...rising-fdi-takes-care-current-account-deficit