It is India's century, not China's: Kamal Nath

INDIA VERSUS CHINA: Kamal Nath poonted out that economic reforms in India were only 17-years old.
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New York: The 21st century is going to be India's, not China's, because it is the fastest growing free market economy, Commerce and Industry Minister Kamal Nath has said.
"China's growth rate is much better than ours today but what was it 14 years ago?" he asked while defending the title of his book, "India's Century".
Speaking at a discussion on his book at Asia Society here Thursday, the minister said that the form of government in India was better compared to the controlled system in China.
He also pointed out that economic reforms in India were only 17 years old while the reform process in China began three decades ago.
Among other factors that would help India, Nath said, were its vast English speaking population and its ability to produce entrepreneurs.
"In New York, many of the penthouses are owned by CEOs of Indian origin," he pointed out. "And the phenomenon of Indian entrepreneurs' success can be seen across the world.
"India's strong human resource will hold the country in good stead in the 21st century which is the era of soft power."
Underlining the importance of higher education to fuel India's economic boom, the minister said the government was about to bring a legislation to address the problem of shortage of higher eduction avenues.
He added that indigenous institutions like the Indian School of Business were already on an expansion spree.
While agreeing that the reform process that began in 1991 could have started a bit early, Nath said that India cannot go for an absolutely capitalist system "because you cannot leave 300 million subsisting on a dollar a day to the mercy of the market forces.
"At a time of food crisis and rising food prices, it is our public distribution system that is serving the poor," he said.
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Total Comments: 5
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It is not India's century yet but it can become one, if politicians don't interfere with reservations and loan waivers
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Mr. Nath could be right with this observation but he missed out one major point and that the biggest stumbling
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Let India address the infrastructure issue urgently and create sufficient capacity in terms of ports, roads, warehouses and trains. India
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This man really must have had 10 Tequilas. There is no comparison between China's Meticulously drawn, planned out progression to
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Kamal Nath is a typical Indian looking for premature celebration of India's 21st century dominance, and producing a damp squib,
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