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adityakarnik (adityakarnik) Sr Member

Joined: 22 Apr 2007 Posts: 97 IBS Campus: Gurgaon Batch Year: 2008
Thanks: 0 Thanked 8 Times in 7 Posts
Home Town: Mumbai
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Posted: Fri Jul 06, 2007 7:46 am Post subject: India and China, is comparison worth it? |
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Comparing China and India
http://www.businessworld.in/content/view/2017/2081
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The author is the founder of CERG Advisory that specialises in corporate consulting and economic advisory services. He can be reached at omkar.goswami@cergindia.com.This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it
_________________ Best regards,
Aditya Karnik |
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abhishek1711 (shah) Site Admin

Joined: 21 Apr 2007 Posts: 684 IBS Campus: Gurgaon Batch Year: 2008
Thanks: 101 Thanked 173 Times in 80 Posts
Home Town: Kolkata
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Posted: Fri Jul 06, 2007 4:18 pm Post subject: |
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Thats an amazing article - busts a lot of hype about India Vs China....China is far far ahead , and all the comparisons is just not worth it
The above article gives it all - the real figures which say it all.
Apart from this there is something else that very few people realise - China has been able to implement strong population controll mechanism, while India continues to break all records in this respect. Thus even if India generates more n mor wealth , its distributed among more hands to eat leading to low per capita income....this is a major factor i believe - and one which will ensure that India can never play catchup with China in this century atleast
P.S - am saving this article in the placements section too, as it could be very useful for our interviews GD's
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MayankSingh (Mayank Singh) Newbie

Joined: 17 Jul 2007 Posts: 21 IBS Campus: Gurgaon Batch Year: 2008
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Home Town: Sonepat
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Posted: Sat Jul 21, 2007 4:04 am Post subject: |
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The growth of China and India is really about ‘back to the future’
In 1820, China and India generated 49% of worldwide GDP. In 2025, these two countries are forecast to be headed for that level of world GDP, having bottomed out at 8% in 1973
As WPP Group Plc. CEO Sir Martin Sorrell continues to take centrestage this week in India’s media and advertising world, Mint is bringing a three-part, first person account of his views on what will drive the world of advertising and marketing services in 2007 and beyond.
On Friday, Sir Martin wrote about globalization and Americanization. Today, he focuses on China and India. Monday’s Mint will carry other conclusions from his account, dubbed The Advertising & Marketing Services Industry: China and the Internet. Edited excerpts:
China and India: a different world
It is difficult for those of us in the West to comprehend the scale of Asia Pacific’s potential development. China is not just one country; it consists of more than 30 provinces, with so many languages and dialects that Mao Tse Tung needed an interpreter. The population may well be closer to 1.5 billion rather than 1.3 billion. The Chinese government seems to consistently underestimate its statistics, like those for GDP growth. But it is still equivalent to four or five Americas.
It is true also that currently only 150-200 million Chinese can afford the goods and services we are trying to market to them. However, this is already equivalent to over half an America and this is a dynamic situation, one that will change rapidly in the coming years. Already, there are almost 500 million mobile phone subscribers in China, 300 million of which subscribe to one company, China Mobile (one of the top five most valuable world brands)—that’s equal to the total population of the US. Furthermore, India—itself equivalent to three to four Americas—seems to have been stimulated into more rapid growth, driven perhaps by neighbourhood envy and the Chinese model of state-directed capitalism, although they bill themselves as the world’s fastest-growing democracy.
Do not underestimate the potential of the region as rapprochement spreads even to cricket, with the Indian-Pakistani test and one-day series representing as important a political, economic and social signal as the Beijing Olympics. Or look at the dog-fight for Hutchison Essar Ltd, which Vodafone won, in a market growing at five million subscribers per month, just like China.
Asia Pacific will dominate again. This really is back to the future. In 1820, China and India generated around 49% of worldwide GDP. In the early 19th century, Meissen and Wedgwood were dismantling the high-quality, high-price Chinese porcelain industry, with similar quality but low priced porcelain. It is the exact reverse today. In 2025, these two countries are forecast to be headed for the same level of world GDP, having bottomed out at 8% in 1973.
http://www.livemint.com/2007/07/21001748/The-growth-of-China-and-India.html
_________________ cheers..
Mayank Singh
Batch of 2008
IBS-Gurgaon |
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