Saturday, December 20, 2008

India and China in The Economist













Last week's issue of The Economist had a survey with eight articles covering the range of issues facing India and an interesting piece about the different ways the current economic outlook threatens India and China. If you're interested in either of these topics, check it out.

The China/India comparison is fascinating. I'm more than a little concerned about social unrest in China over the next few years. Their economic growth has been massively dependent on exports to consumers in the West. And two months ago those consumers buying. As factories in China close, a lot of people are going to be out on the streets and angry. And historically, China has been vulnerable to social unrest. Look for whether their businesses are able to respond to the new environment and how successful the government is in quelling public demonstrations.

For all its inefficiency and corruption, India's democracy at least provides a pressure valve for its society's discontents.

In case you haven't had your fill...














...of articles about the election, here's a really great piece in Newsweek about the three major campaigns for president and how they were run. Newsweek's reporters were given inside access to the Obama, Clinton and McCain campaigns . In return they agreed not to publish the story until after the election. The result is an in depth profile of all three candidates and the way their teams managed their campaigns. Says a lot about the quality of the candidates.

Really...?

See this piece by Joe Nocera in the NYTimes about how India avoided getting sucked into the financial crisis. Sounds great. Not sure how much I believe it.

My impression is that many of India's strengths in the current economic environment came from a failure to liberalize the economy. But perhaps there was more forethought in that then I was aware of. I just hope we don't hear that the government has avoided investing in physical infrastructure and reforming labor laws because that might have led to an unhealthy dependence on manufacturing exports.

Let's try this again...



















Stop blogging for a few months and the whole world goes to pot.

So, I got a bit distracted with things over the last couple of months and the blog fell through the cracks (also, there's a new firewall at work, which prevents me from procrastinating in this particular venue). But now, with all the crises going on around the world I find I'm emailing a lot of interesting articles to friends. Then I remembered, "Hey, didn't I used to have a blog... and can't you use blogs to post you read so others can read them too..." Yup.

So let's give this blogging thing another shot...