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·
5600 dailies, 15000 weeklies and 20000 periodicals in 21
languages with a combined circulation of 142 million. ·
GDP $576 Billion. (GDP rate 8%) ·
Parliamentary form of Government ·
Worlds largest democracy. ·
Worlds 4th largest economy. ·
World-class recognition in IT, bio-technology and space. ·
Largest English speaking nation in the world. ·
3rd largest standing army force, over 1.5Million
strong. ·
2nd largest pool of scientists and engineers in the
World. ·
Bharat Forge has the world's largest single-location
forging facility, its clients include Honda, Toyota and Volvo amongst
others. ·
Hero Honda with 1.7M motorcycles a year is now the largest
motorcycle manufacturer in the world. ·
India is the 2nd largest tractor manufacturer in the
world. ·
India is the 5th largest commercial vehicle manufacturer
in the world. ·
Ford has just presented its Gold World Excellence Award to
India's Cooper Tyres. ·
Suzuki, which makes Maruti in India has decided to make
India its manufacturing, export and research hub outside Japan. ·
Hyundai India is set to become the global small car hub
for the Korean giant and will produce 25k Santros to start with. ·
By 2010 it is set to supply half a million cars to Hyundai
Korea. HMI and Ford. ·
The prestigious UK automaker, MG Rover is marketing
100,000 Indica cars made by Tata in Europe, under its own name. ·
Aston Martin contracted prototyping its latest luxury
sports car, AM V8 Vantage, to an Indian-based designer and is set to
produce the cheapest Aston Martin ever. India:
Technology Superpower ·
Geneva-based STMicroelectronics is one of the largest
semiconductor companies to develop integrated circuits and software in
India. ·
Texas Instruments
was the first to open operations in Bangalore, followed by Motorola,
Intel, Cadence Design Systems and several others. ·
80 of the World’s 117 SEI CMM Level-5 companies are
based in India. ·
5 Indian companies recently received the globally
acclaimed Deming prize. This prize is given to an organization for
rigorous total quality management (TQM) practices. ·
15 of the world's major Automobile makers are obtaining
components from Indian companies. ·
This business fetched India $1.5 Billion in 2003, and will
reach $15 Billion by 2007. ·
New emerging industries areas include, Bio-Informatics,
Bio-Technology, Genomics, Clinical
Research and Trials. ·
World-renowned TQM expert Yasutoshi Washio predicts that
Indian manufacturing quality will overtake that of Japan in 2013. ·
McKinsey believes India's revenues from the IT
industry will reach $87 Billion by 2008. ·
Flextronics, the $14 billion
global major in Electronic Manufacturing Services, has announced that it
will make India a global competence centre for telecom software
development. India:
Trade ·
Tata Motors paid $ 118 million to buy Daewoo commercial
vehicle Company of Korea. ·
Ranbaxy, the largest Indian pharmaceutical company, gets
70% of its $1 billion revenue from overseas operations and 40% from USA. ·
Tata Tea has bought Tetley of UK for £260M. ·
India is one of the world's largest diamond cutting and
polishing centres, its exports were worth $6 Billion in 1999. ·
About 9 out of 10 diamond stones sold anywhere in the
world, pass through India. ·
Garment exports are expected to increase from the current
level of $6 billion to $25 billion by 2010. ·
The country's foreign exchange reserves stand at an
all-time high of $120 Billion. ·
India's trade with China grew by by 104% in 2002 and in
the first 5 months of 2003, India has amassed a surplus in trade close to
$0.5M. ·
Mobile phones are growing by about 1.5Million a month.
Long distance rates are down by two-thirds in five years and by 80% for
data transmission. ·
Wal-Mart sources $1 Billion worth of goods from
India - half its apparel. Wal-Mart expects this to increase
to $10 Billion in the next couple of years. ·
GAP sources about $600 million and Hilfiger $100 million
worth of apparel from India. India:
Self-Reliance ·
India is among six countries that launch satellites and do
so even for Germany, Belgium, South Korea, Singapore and EU countries. ·
India's INSAT is among the world's largest domestic
satellite communication systems. ·
India’s Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV)
was indigenously manufactured with most of the components like motor
cases, inter-stages, heat shield, cryogenic engine, electronic modules all
manufactured by public and private Indian industry. ·
Kalpana Chawla was one of the seven astronauts in the
Columbia space shuttle when it disintegrated over Texas skies just 16
minutesbefore its scheduled landing on Feb 1st 2003, she was the second
Indian in space. ·
Back in 1968, India imported 9M tonnes of food-grains to
support its people, through a grand programme of national self-sufficiency
which started in 1971, today, it now has a food grain surplus stock of
60M. ·
India is among the 3 countries in the World that have
built Supercomputers on their own. The other two countries being USA
and Japan. ·
India built its own Supercomputer after the USA denied
India purchasing a Cray computer back in 1987. ·
India’s new ‘PARAM Padma’ Terascale Supercomputer (1
Trillion processes per sec.) is also amongst only 4 nations in the world
to have this capability. ·
India is providing aid to 11 countries, writing-off their
debt and loaning the IMF $300M. ·
It has also prepaid $3Billion owed to the World Bank and
Asian Development Bank. India:
Pharmaceuticals ·
The Indian pharmaceutical industry at $6.5 billion
and growing at 8-10% annually, is the 4th largest pharmaceutical
industry in the world, and is expected to be worth $12 billion by
2008. ·
Its exports are over $2 billion. India is among the top
five bulk drug makers and at home, the local industry has edged out the
Multi-National companies whose share of 75% in the market is down to 35%.
·
Trade of medicinal plants has crossed $900M already. ·
There are 170 biotechnology companies in India,
involved in the development and manufacture of genomic drugs, whose
business is growing exponentially. ·
Sequencing genes and delivering
genomic information for big Pharmaceutical companies is the next
boom industry in India. India:
Foreign Multi-National Companies Top
5 American employers in India: General
Electric: : 17,800 employees ·
General Electric (GE) with $80 Million invested in India
employs 16,000 staff, 1,600 R&D staff who are qualified with PhD’s
and Master’s degrees. ·
The number of patents filed in USA by the Indian entities
of some of the MNCs (upto September, 2002) are as follows: Texas
Instruments - 225, Intel - 125, Cisco Systems - 120, IBM - 120, Phillips -
102, GE - 95. ·
Staff at the offices of Intel (India) has
gone up from 10 to 1,000 in 4 years, and will reach 2000 staff by 2006. ·
GE's R&D centre in Bangalore is the company's largest
research outfit outside the United States. The centre also devotes 20% of
its resources on 5 to 10 year fundamental research in areas such as nanotechnology,
hydrogen energy, photonics, and advanced
propulsion. ·
It is estimated that there are 150,000 IT professionals in
Bangalore as against 120,000 in Silicon Valley. India:
R&D Labs Established in 2002 with just two
people, has scaled up to 20 specialists today. Plans exist to double its
headcount by the beginning of 2004. Is totally dedicated to high-level
research on futuristic technologies, with special focus on emerging
markets.
Bangalore. Established in 1996 with 10 people,
has scaled up to 895 people today, and will be further scaled up to 1,000
before the end of 2003. Works on developing software for Philips products.
Almost all Philips products that use software have some contribution from
this centre. It is the largest software centre for Philips outside
Holland. Innovation Campus, Bangalore. Established in November 1998 with
100 people, the Lab swill be scaled up to 1500 by the end of 2004.
That will double 3000 staff by middle of 2006. It is the largest
single-location R&D lab for SAP outside Walldorf, Germany. Nearly 10
percent of SAP's total R&D work is carried out from the Indian lab. Labs India, Bangalore. Established in 2001. Works on all
IBM software like WebSphere, DB2, Lotus, Tivoli and Rational. The centre
has added many new areas of activities such as middleware and business
intelligence.
Software Lab,
Bangalore, Pune. Established in 1988 with 20 people,
has scaled up to 1,000 today. Drives nearly 60 percent of the company’s
global development delivery.
R&D Centre,
Bangalore and Mumbai. Established in mid-1999 with 20
people, has scaled up to 500 people today. Does work mainly on Sun's
software which includes Solaris and Sun One.
India Engineering Centre,
Bangalore The Bangalore centre was
established in 1994; the Hyderabad one in 1999. Oracle’s largest
development centre outside the US currently has 6,000 staff. Does work on
Oracle's database products, applications, business intelligence products
and application development tools, besides other activities. India Development Centre,
Bangalore, Hyderabad. Established in 1984. The centre
started with just 20 people, now has 900 people working on VLSI and
embedded software, which goes along with a chip or into the chip. R&D Centre, Bangalore Highlights R&D Centre India:
BPO ·
The domestic BPO sector is projected to increase to $4
billion in 2004 and reach $65 billion by 2010. (McKinsey & Co.). ·
The outsourcing includes a wide range of services
including design, architecture, management, legal services, accounting and
drug development and the Indian BPOs are moving up in the value chain. ·
There are about 200 call centers in India with a turnover
of $2 billion and a workforce of 150,000. ·
100 of the Fortune 500 are now present in India compared
to 33 in China. ·
Cummins of USA uses its R&D Centre in Pune to develop
the sophisticated computer models needed to design upgrades and prototypes
electronically and introduce 5 or 6 new engine models a year. ·
Business Week of 8th December 2003 has said "Quietly
but with breathtaking speed, India and its millions of world-class
engineering, business and medical graduates are becoming enmeshed in
America's New Economy in ways most of us barely imagine". William
H. Gates, Chairman and Chief Software Architect Microsoft Corporation (b-1955): “…after
the Chinese, South Indians are the smartest people in the world.” India:
Technology Superpower ·
Over 100 MNCs have set up R&D facilities in India in
the past five years. These include GE, Bell Labs, Du Pont, Daimler
Chrysler, Eli Lilly, Intel, Monsanto, Texas Instruments, Caterpillar,
Cummins, GM, Microsoft and IBM. ·
India’s telecom infrastructure between Chennai, Mumbai
and Singapore, provides the largest bandwidth capacity in the world,
with well over 8.5 Terabits (8.5Tbs) per second. ·
With more than 250 universities, 1,500 research
institutions and 10,428 higher-education institutes, India produces
200,000 engineering graduates and another 300,000 technically trained
graduates every year. ·
Besides, another 2 million other graduates qualify out in
India annually. ·
The Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) is among the
top three universities from which McKinsey & Company, the
world's biggest consulting firm, hires most. Indians
abroad A
snapshot of Indians at the helm of leading Global businesses The
Co-founder of Sun Microsystems (Vinod Khosla), Creator
of Pentium Chip (Vinod Dahm), Founder
and creator of Hotmail (Sabeer Bhatia), Chief
Executive of McKinsey & Co. (Rajat Gupta) President
and CFO of Pepsi Cola (Indra Nooyi) President
of United Airlines (Rono Dutta) GM
of Hewlett Packard (Rajiv Gupta) President
and CEO of US Airways (Rakesh Gangwal) Chief
Executive of CitiBank (Victor Menezes), Chief
Executives of Standard Chartered Bank (Rana Talwar) Chief
Executive officer of Vodafone (Arun Sarin) President
of AT & T-Bell Labs (Arun Netravali) Vice-Chairman
and founder of Juniper Networks (Pradeep Sindhu) Founder
of Bose Audio (Amar Bose) Founder,
chip designer Cirrus Logic (Suhas Patil ) Chairman
and CEO of Computer Associates (Sanjay Kumar) Head
of (HPC WorldWide) of Unilever Plc. (Keki Dadiseth) Chief
Executive Officer of HSBC (Aman Mehta) Director
and member of Executive Board of Goldman Sachs (Girish Reddy) Chief
Economist of the International Monetary Fund (Raghuram Rajan) Former
CTO of Novell Networks (Kanwal Rekhi) Indians
in the USA. ·
Of the 1.5M Indians living in the USA, 1/5th of them
live in the Silicon Valley. ·
35% of Silicon Valley start-ups are by
Indians. ·
Indian students are the largest in number among
foreign students in USA. Statistics that show: 38% of doctors in the
USA, 12% of scientists in the
USA, 36% of NASA scientists, 34% of Microsoft
employees, 28% of IBM employees, 17% of INTEL scientists, 13% of XEROX employees, … are Indians. 1. India 44% US
H1-B Visa applicants
country of
origin “IIT
= Harvard + MIT + Princeton” “IIT
= Harvard + MIT + Princeton” , says CBS ‘60 Minutes’. CBS'
highly-regarded ‘60 Minutes’, the most widely watched news programme
in the US, told its audience of more than 10 Million viewers that “IIT
may be the most important university you've never heard of." "The
United States imports oil from Saudi Arabia, cars from Japan,
TVs from Korea and Whiskey from Scotland. So what do we
import from India? We import people, really smart people," co-host
Leslie Stahl began while introducing the segment on IIT. “…in science and technology,
IIT undergraduates leave their American counterparts in the dust.” “Think about that for a
minute: A kid from India using an Ivy League university as a
safety school. That's how smart these guys are.” There are “cases where
students who couldn't get into computer science at IIT, they have gotten
scholarships at MIT, at Princeton, at Caltech.” Mahatma
Gandhi (1869-1948): Gandhi
was once asked what he thought about Western Civilization. His response
was: "I think it would be a good idea.” "The
greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its
animals are treated.“ “You
must not lose faith in humanity. Humanity is an ocean; if a few drops of
the ocean are dirty, the ocean does not become dirty.” “The
only devils in this world are those running around inside our own hearts,
and that is where all our battles should be fought.” “If
all Christians acted like Christ, the whole world would be Christian.” “Woman,
I hold, is the personification of self-sacrifice, but unfortunately today
she does not realize what tremendous advantage she has over man.” “Indians,
will stagger humanity without shedding a drop of blood.” “An
eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.” Sir C.V. Raman, (1888 – 1970) 1930 - Nobel Laureate in Physics
for work on scattering of light and Raman effect. Sir Jagdish Chandra Bose, (1858
– 1937) USA based IEEE
has proved what has been a century old suspicion amongst academics that
the pioneer of wireless-radio communication was Professor
Jagdish Chandra Bose and not Guglielmo Marconi. Satyendranath Bose, (1894-1974) Indian Physicist,
who solved one of the mysteries of quantum mechanics, showing that in the
quantum world some particles are indistinguishable. His collaborations
with Albert Einstein led to a new branch on statistical mechanics
know commonly known as the “Einstein-Bose” statistics. Srinivasa Ramanujam,(1887 –
1920): Great Indian Mathematician,
whose interest from academics at Trinity, College, Cambridge, led him to
collaborate there and postulate and prove well over 3,542 theorems. Amartya Sen, (b-1933): 1998 - The Nobel Prize for
Economics for his redefining work on ethical welfare economics.
Currently residing as Lamont University Professor Emeritus at Harvard,
after stepping down from the prestigious post of Master of Trinity
College, Cambridge. Subramanyan Chandrasekhar, (1910-1995): 1983 Nobel Laureate in Physics.
His many contributions to physics, on the structure and evolution of stars
including rotational figures of equilibrium, stellar interiors, black
holes, radiative transfer, hydromagnetic stability, stellar dynamics. Har Gobind Khorana, (b-1922 ): 1968 - Nobel Laureate in
Medicine for work on interpretation of the genetic code .
Currently residing as professor at MIT. Civilized Past India India
never invaded any country in her last 10,000 years of history. It
is the only society in the world which has never known slavery. India
was the richest country on Earth until the time of the British in the
early 17th Century Robert
Clive’s personal wealth amassed from the blunder of Bengal during
1750’s was estimated at around £401,102 It
has been estimated that the total amount of treasure that the British
looted from India had already reached £1,000,000,000 (£1Billion) by
1901.
Taking into consideration interest rates and inflation this would be worth
close to $1,000,000,000,000 ($1Trillion) in real-terms today. Vedic
Civilization Indus
& Saraswati Civilizations Rise
of Jainism and Buddhism Mauryan
Period Golden
Age of Indian Arts & Sciences Muslim
Invasions The
Mughal Empire Portuguese
Invasion The
British East-India Company The
British Empire India's
Freedom Struggle Independence
Modern
India 2020 Vision A
Brief History of Time India ·
India invented the Number System. Zero was
invented by Aryabhatta. The place value system, the decimal system
was developed in India in 100 BC. ·
Aryabhatta was the first to explain spherical shape, size ,diameter, rotation
and correct speed of Earth in 499 AD. ·
The World's first university was established in
Takshila in 700 BC. Students from all over the World studied more than 60
subjects. ·
The University of Nalanda built in the 4th
century was one of the greatest achievements of ancient India in the field
of education. ·
Sanskrit is considered the mother of all higher languages. Sanskrit is the
most precise, and therefore suitable language for computer software - a
report in Forbes magazine, July 1987. ·
Ayurveda is the earliest school of medicine known to humans. Charaka, the
father of medicine consolidated Ayurveda 2500 years ago. ·
Today Ayurveda is fast regaining its rightful
place in civilization. ·
Christopher Columbus was attracted India's
wealth and was looking for route to India when he discovered the American
continent by mistake. ·
The art of Navigation was born in the river
Sindh 6000 years ago. The word ‘Navigation’ is derived from the
Sanskrit word NAVGATIH. The word navy is also derived from Sanskrit 'Nou'.
·
In Siddhanta Siromani (Bhuvanakosam 6) Bhaskaracharya
II described about gravity of earth about 400 years before Sir Isaac
Newton. He also had some clear notions on differential calculus, and the
Theory of Continued Fraction. Languages
of India Hindi Sanskrit Tamil Gujarati Urdu Punjabi Malayalam Bengali Marathi Konkani Kannada Assamese Telegu Oriya Rajasthani The
Ancient Vedic Hymns “There
is only one truth, only men describe it in different ways.“ Yajur
Veda - Knowledge of Liturgy, 3,988
verses Sama
Veda - Knowledge of Classical Music, 1,549
verses Ayur
Veda - Knowledge of Medicine, over
100,000 verses Upanishads Jyotisha
– Astrology and Astronomy. Kalpa
– Rituals and Legal matters. Siksha
– Phonetics. Aitareya
– Creation of the Universe, Man and Evolution. Chandogya
– Reincarnation, Soul. Kaushitaki
– Karma. Kena
– Austerity, Work, and Restraint. Dharnur
Veda – Science of Archery and War. Mundaka
– Discipline, Faith and warning of Ignorance. Sulba
Sutra – Knowledge of Mathematics Yoga
Sutra - Knowledge of
Meditation Kama
Sutra - Knowledge of Love and Sex Sanskrit
(संस्कृत ) It
is the oldest, most scientific, systematic language in the world. It
became the language of all cultured people in India and in the countries
that were influenced by India. Sanskrit
literally
means “refined” or
“perfected” 'measuring
the earth’ 'measuring
triangular forms‘ ‘first
person pronoun’ ‘the
same’ mother papa
/ father brother sister geometry trigonometry door me name smile equal matar pitar bhratar svasar gyaamti trikonamiti dvaar ma naman smi eka Sanskrit
meaning English
meaning Sanskrit
word India ·
Theory of Continued Fraction
was discovered by Bhaskaracharya II. ·
Indians discovered Arithmetic and Geometric progression.
Arithmetic progression is explained in Yajurveda. ·
Govindaswamin discovered Newton Gauss Interpolation formula
about 1800 years before Newton. ·
Vateswaracharya discovered Newton Gauss Backward
Interpolation formula about 1000 years before Newton. ·
Parameswaracharya discovered Lhuiler’s formula about 400
years before Lhuiler. ·
Nilakanta discovered Newton’s Infinite Geometric
Progression convergent series. ·
Positive and Negative numbers and their calculations were
explained first by Brahmagupta in his book Brahmasputa Siddhanta. ·
Aryabhatta also propounded the Heliocentric
theory of gravitation, thus predating Copernicus by almost one
thousand years. ·
Madhavacharya discovered Taylor series
of Sine and Cosine function about 250 years before Taylor. ·
Madhavacharya discovered Newton Power series. ·
Madhavacharya discovered Gregory Leibnitz series for the
Inverse Tangent about 280 years before Gregory. ·
Madhavacharya discovered Leibnitz power series for pi
about 300 years before Leibnitz. ·
Bhaskaracharya calculated the time
taken by the earth to orbit the sun hundreds of years before the
astronomer Smart. Time taken by earth to orbit the sun: (5th century) 365.258756484
days ·
Infinity was well known for ancient
Indians. Bhaskaracharya II in Beejaganitha(stanza-20) has given clear
explanation with examples for infinity The
Surya Siddhanta, A
textbook on astronomy of ancient India, last
compiled in 1000 BC, believed to be handed down from 3000 BC by aid of
complex mnemonic recital methods still known today. Showed
the Earth's diameter to be 7,840 miles, compared
to modern measurements of 7,926.7 miles. Showed
the distance between the Earth and the Moon as 253,000 miles, Compared
to modern measurements of 252,710 miles. India ·
The value of "pi" was first calculated by
Boudhayana, and he explained the concept of what is known as the
Pythagorean Theorem. He discovered this in the 6th century long before the
European mathematicians. This was ‘validated’ by British scholars in
1999. ·
Algebra, trigonometry and calculus
came from India. Quadratic equations were propounded by Sridharacharya
in the 11th century. ·
The largest numbers the Greeks and the Romans used were
106 whereas Hindus used numbers as big as 1053 with specific names as
early as 5000 BC during the Vedic period. Even today, the largest used
number is Tera: 1012. ·
Maharshi Sushruta
is the father of surgery. 2600 years ago he and health scientists of his
time conducted complicated surgeries like caesareans, cataract, artificial
limbs, fractures, urinary stones and even plastic surgery. ·
Usage of anaesthesia was well known in
ancient India. Over 125 surgical equipments were used. ·
Detailed knowledge of anatomy, physiology,
aetiology, embryology, digestion, metabolism, genetics and immunity is
also found in many texts. ·
When many cultures were only nomadic forest
dwellers over 5000 years ago, Indians established Harappan culture in the
Sindhu Valley Civilization. Kalarippayat
- Origin of Martial arts – 200
BC Kerala,
South India, guardians of the origins of modern martial-arts, influenced
by Yoga and connected to the ancient Indian sciences of war (dhanur-veda)
and medicine (ayur-veda). The
origin of kung-fu begins with the legend of a monk named Bodhidharma (also
known as Ta Mo) who travelled from India to China around 500 A.D. The
Encyclopaedia Britannica says: "Man
must have an original cradle land whence the peopling of the
earth was brought about by migration. As
to man’s cradle land, there have been many theories but the weight
of evidence is in favour of Indo-Malaysia.” "If
there is a country on earth which can justly claim the honour of having
been the cradle of the Human race or at least the scene of primitive
civilization, the successive developments of which carried into all parts
of the ancient world and even beyond, the blessings of knowledge which is
the second life of man, that country is assuredly India.“ Future "In
India today, we
have a lady born a Catholic (Sonia Gandhi) stepping
aside so a Sikh (Manmohan Singh) could
be sworn in by a Muslim president (Abdul Kalam) to
lead a nation that's 82% Hindu. I
defy anyone to cite another country with such diversity and tolerance to
its political leadership." Secular
Tolerance Goldman
Sachs Report of 1 October, 2003 – "Dreaming
with BRICs: The path to 2050" India's
GDP will reach $ 1 trillion by 2011, $
2 trillion by 2020, $
3 trillion by 2025, $
6 trillion by 2032, $
10 trillion by 2038, and $
27 trillion by 2050, becoming
the 3rd largest economy after USA and China. In
terms of GDP, India will overtake Italy by the year 2016, France by 2019,
UK by 2022, Germany
by 2023, and Japan by 2032. Progress
during the last 20 years Poverty
(incidence) 1980s 1990s 2000 44% 36% 26% Education
(literacy rate) 1980s 1990s 2000 44% 52% 65% Health
(life expectancy) 1980s 1990s 2000 56 60 69 Source:
World Bank (2003) Ex-Prime
Minister, Sri
Atal Bihari Vajpayee A treaty was signed on 6
January, 2004, establishing a South Asian Free Trade Area among the seven
SAARC countries (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, Sri Lanka and
Maldives) in the region. India committed to a South Asian
Union as the ultimate objective, with mutual security cooperation, open
borders and a single currency in Southern Asia in the long run. "The
bonds of ethnicity and culture which hold together the peoples of this
region are more enduring than the barriers of political prejudice that
have been erected quite recently.“ ”….Friends,
India is ready to do everything that is necessary, to walk as many extra
miles as may be required, to make this vision a reality.” Dr
Abdul Kalam, President of India, father
of India’s space, missile and satellite programme and author of “India
2020 Vision”. “I
have three visions for India.” 1.
“
In 3000 years of our history people from all over the world have come and
invaded us, captured our lands, conquered our minds. From Alexander
onwards. The Greeks, the Turks, the Moguls, the Portuguese, the British,
the French, the Dutch, all of them came and looted us, took over what was
ours. Yet
we have not done this to any other nation. We have not conquered anyone.
We have not grabbed their land, their culture, their history and tried to
enforce our way of life on them. Why?
Because
we respect the freedom of others. That is why my first vision is that of
FREEDOM. I
believe that India got its first vision of this in 1857, when we started
the war of independence. It is this freedom that we must protect and
nurture and build on. If we are not free, no one will respect us. “ 2.
My
second vision for India is DEVELOPMENT. For fifty years we have been a
developing nation. It is time we see ourselves as a developed nation. We
are among top 5 nations of the world in terms of GDP. We have 10% growth
rate in most areas. Our poverty levels are falling. Our achievements are
being globally recognized today. Yet we lack the self-confidence to see
ourselves as a
developed nation, self-reliant and self-assured. 3.
I
have a THIRD vision. India must stand up to the world. Because I believe
that unless India stands up to the world, no one will respect us. Only
strength respects strength. We must be strong not only as a military power
but also as an economic power. Both must go hand-in-hand.” India’s
population to be the largest in the world India
is set to overtake China as the world's most populous nation by 2050. India’s
population is expected to grow from 1.08bn to 1.63bn people, overtaking
China, which is forecast to reach 1.44bn from 1.3bn currently. India,
will also have the highest working population in the World — 700 million
people out of 1.1 billion people are young; the young population will
continue till 2050.
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