India & China
China is world’s most populous country and India stands second. Both India and china are
witnessing high economy growth. The market share of both the Asian Behemoth has
increased substantially- about 6.4% of worlds output at current price and exchange rate.
There is huge inflow of FDI, china having FDI inflow of $105 billion and India of about
$23.7billion
Structural change
China has a “classic” pattern. It has moved from primary to manufacturing sector, which has
doubled its share of workforce and tripled its share of output. India on other hand has moved
from predominantly agriculture to services in share of output, with no substantial increase in
manufacturing. However the the structure of employment has not changed much. Share of the
primary sector in GDP fell from 60 percent to 25 percent in four decades, but share in
employment is still more than 60 percent.
Poverty reduction
Officially china has 4 percent of the population living under the poverty line, however
unofficially china has around 12 percent. (Reflects earlier asset redistribution and basic need
provision in China under communism, plus larger mass market and role of agricultural
prices.)
India has poverty ratio much higher and persistent, between 26 percent and 34 percent
depending upon how one interprets the NSS data.
China has dazzling infrastructure. The work on infrastructure started in the late 1990. Since
the construction of roads, bridges, flyover, dams & power projects have grown by leaps and
bounds. China is spending about 12% of its GDP in infrastructure, which is substantial after
taking into consideration it is world’s second largest GDP.
However India lacks in infrastructure tremendously. As per estimates India is losing about
2% of its growth due to the infrastructure constraint. India is spending just 5% of its GDP on
infrastructure.
India has very strong banking and legal system, thanks to the democracy. Indian banking
system is being considered as one of the most robust due to strong regulation and less
interference of Central government in day to day activity of public sector bank. The biggest
advantage of India with respect to china is due to large English speaking population.
However china is catching up with India, as government has shifted its focus on these
lacunae.
Literacy in India is abysmal, around 61% compare to china’s 95%. The main reason is poor
implementation of various government initiatives to educate the mass. Expenditure on
education in India is 10.7% of annual income of household, while in china it is 12.8%. On
absolute term china is spending much more than India as per capita income of china is more
than double of India.[ CITATION Tra10 \l 1033 ]
On broad level both India and china are suffering from same problem. Both are suffering
from agrarian crisis. More people are employed in agricultural sector than its contribution to
the GDP. What both of them has to do is create more and more of employment. In china there
is lot of difference in distribution of income, even on regional level. While east china is
prospering west china has been largely left out. What china should try to do is deal with
growing level of inequlity
Strength
The biggest strength of china lies in its ability to mobilize masses of workers and capital with
speed that has contributed to some remarkable achievements.
As per The World Bank’s 2009 poverty assessment the number of impoverished Chinese left
to consume less than a dollar per day has decreased by more than 500 million between 1981
and 2004. Today, the average Chinese lives 27 years longer than in 1960, and roughly twice
the percentage of the population is enrolled in secondary education compared to 1990,
according to the World Bank[ CITATION Wor10 \l 1033 ]
Concerns
Rising Inflation
China’s major effort to avert the worst of the global financial crisis came in late 2008 in the
form of a massive RMB4 trillion (roughly US$600 billion) two-year fiscal stimulus equal to
about 13 percent of China’s 2008 GDP. The stimulus plan helped China achieve 9.1 percent
GDP growth in 2009 and shore up employment by directing record amounts of state bank
lending to bridge, railway and road building and to helping reconstruction efforts in the
earthquake-hit Sichuan Province[ CITATION Clo11 \l 1033 ]. However, this lead to spiralling
food and commodity prices. Central bank data show new loans through the first 10 months
of the year reached RMB6.88 trillion (US$1 trillion), according to The Wall Street Journal.
That amount is closing in on the RMB7.5 trillion target Beijing set earlier in the year to limit
new loan authorizations and flirts with the nearly RMB1O trillion in record new state-
directed loans set in 2009 to finance the bulk of the stimulus[ CITATION Clo11 \l 1033 ]
Factors such as flood damage and rising labour costs contributed to a 62% increase year-on-
year on the average wholesale price of 18 types of staple vegetables over the first 10 days in
November. New loans through the first 10 months of the year reached RMB 6.88 trillion (US
$1 trillion), the Consumer Price Index (CPI) a widely used inflation gauge heated up to a
two-year high of 4.4% in October year-on-year. Food prices increased 10.1% in October from
the previous year, while consumer prices increased 5%[ CITATION Fin11 \l 1033 ].
Steps by government to combat inflation
The People’s Bank of China (PBoC), China’s central bank, has moved decisively to tighten
rapid credit growth. It recently instructed banks to increase their reserve requirement ratio
nation’s lending and deposit rates — the first interest rate hike since 2007
Overheated Property Market
The real estate sector provides a sizeable revenue stream for many of China’s major
municipal governments, construction jobs for countless workers and an important investment
or financial planning component for Chinese families with few domestic alternatives for
multiplying wealth. That’s why this sector has always received largess from the government
and is the most sensitive.
Earlier this year, double-digit monthly price gains and a lending boom set off a real estate
buying frenzy. Beijing increased down payment requirements on first and second home
mortgages, raised lending rates and clamped down on cross-city investments. Recently, banks
across the country were ordered to suspend loans for third home purchases; NBS data show
sales price growth in 70 large and medium cities has decreased seven consecutive months to
8.6% in October year-on-year, down from April’s high of 12.8%.
Domestic Innovation
As per noted Chinese scholar Kenneth Lieberthal of the Brookings Institution in Ethos, China
simply does not yet have high quality corporations that know how to run global operations or
leverage technological change effectively. Many Chinese companies were formerly state-
owned enterprises used to doing everything themselves, they are not very open, and that will
limit their innovation potential. China’s 12th Five-Year Plan, which starts next year, stresses
spurring innovation as part of the country’s economic restructuring strategy. World Bank data
show R&D spending has surged from 0.57% of GDP in 1996 to 1.49% of GDP in
2007[ CITATION Ste11 \l 1033 ]
Increasingly Ageing Population
Market research firm Euromonitor International projects that by that time, China’s population
aged over 65 will increase to 222 million, up 70 percent from today’s size.
By 2030, China will look much like Italy or Japan, in terms of national age distribution, but it
will still be a developing country in terms of per capita GDP, which is a very challenging
situation. China will have the world’s largest proportion of elderly citizens in 2030. Market
research firm Euromonitor International projects that by that time, China’s population aged
over 65 will increase to 222 million, up 70% from today’s size.
Since China introduced a one-child policy in 1978, the country’s fertility rate has plummeted
from 2.7 births per woman to 1.8 in 2009, or below replacement levels, China’s total
government expenditures today on age-related programs such as healthcare, pensions and
unemployment benefits stand at 4.4%
A middle-class lifestyle
Especially in China’s largest cities like Shanghai, Beijing, Suzhou owning a car, a home and
for some, additional homes for financial security or investment purposes is a way of life
More Chinese than ever can afford to educate their children overseas, take vacations and buy
luxury items
A new horizon
Japan will not challenge China in the near future to regain the position it had held for four
decades. It recorded only 0.4% GDP growth in the second quarter of 2010 compared to the
previous quarter and 0.9% growth in the third quarter, according to Japan’s Cabinet Office.
Heavily weighed currency is not helping Japanese exports — a major driver of the country’s
economy — stays competitive in global markets[ CITATION Eco11 \l 1033 ]
China’s economic engine, though slowing, maintains brisk growth and is estimated to expand
10% in 2010, 8.7% next year and easing somewhat further in the medium term .The IMF
forecasted 10.5% GDP growth for China this year and 9.6% in 2011 in its October World
Economic Outlook. China Customs data show that Asian countries accounted for close to
two-thirds of China’s total imports in 2008. The domestic economy aspires to rely less on
increasing exports and investment and more on expanding internal demand and consumption,
moving up the value chain and building world-class technological and educational
institutions.
China is trying to shift from low-margin, export- oriented production to one driven by higher
value-added product research and development and services. It is also establishing free trade
agreements across Asia most notably establishing a free trade area with the 10-country
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) that came into effect at the beginning of
the year between six of the member countries.
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Services
Industry
Agriculture