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An Overview of Modern India (and China)

An Overview of Modern India (and China). Historical Background for The White Tiger. India’s Geography. Located in Southern Asia Northern India defined by the Indo- Gangetic plain Southern India defined by the Deccan Plateau. Dhanbad. India’s History.

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An Overview of Modern India (and China)

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  1. An Overview of Modern India (and China) Historical Background for The White Tiger

  2. India’s Geography • Located in Southern Asia • Northern India defined by the Indo-Gangetic plain • Southern India defined by the Deccan Plateau Dhanbad

  3. India’s History • Ancient Civilizations- developed along the Indus and Ganges river valleys • Empires- united from time to time under various (often foreign) empires- Greek, Persian, Maurya, Gupta, Mughal, British • Colonial Rule- British East India Company gradually gained control of India beginning in the 1600s, directly ruled by the British from 1857-1947 • Independence- achieved in 1947, British India partitioned into Muslim (Pakistan) and Hindu (India) states • Continued Conflict- East Bengal (part of Pakistan) became the independent nation of Bangladesh in 1971, Pakistan and India still fighting over Kashmir

  4. India’s Partition and Political Boundaries

  5. India’s Population • Home to 1.2 billion people (17.5% of the world’s population) • 2nd largest country- will surpass China as most populous country by 2025 • 50% of population is under the age of 25 • Great ethnic, religious, linguistic, and economic diversity

  6. Language in India • Hundreds of languages spoken • Hindi, Bengali, Telugu, Marathi, Tamil, Urdu most widely spoken • 11% of Indians (125 million) speak English, most as a second language • Official languages- English and Hindi, also 14 regional official languages • Adult literacy rate- 74%

  7. Religion in India • Majority identify as Hindus, but a large variety of religions are practiced • 81% Hindu • 13% Muslim • 2.3% Christian • 1.9% Sikh • 0.8% Buddhist

  8. Hinduism • One of the world's oldest, most complex, and largest religions • Different versions of Hinduism, but share overarching beliefs • Belief in Brahman- the unchanging, all-powerful spiritual force of the universe to which everything belongs • Belief in many gods that are manifestations of Brahman: • Brahma (Created of the world) • Shiva (Destroys of the world) • Vishnu (Preserver of the world)

  9. Hinduism (continued) • Goal to unites one’s individual soul (atman) with Brahman to achieve a state of understanding and liberation from desires and suffering (moksha) • One’s soul is reborn many times until moksha is achieved- achieved by following determined path (dharma) and performing good acts and deeds (karma) • The level of society (caste) one is born into is determined by how well he/she followed his/her dharma and karma in the previous life

  10. Caste and Social Class • Social class in India is linked to a caste system that developed over thousands of years • Initially an indictor of one’s occupation • Seen as a reflection of one’s previous life- based on birth • Affects one’s job, where and how one lives, dress, who one interacts with and marries, and social and political power, and one’s treatment • Technically outlawed in 1947 but still has a large influence today, especially in more rural areas • Intercaste relations limited • A highly hierarchical society • Great social interdependence

  11. India’s Economy • 4th largest economy in the world and rapidly growing • Major industries- telecommunications, textiles, chemicals, agriculture, food processing, steel, mining, petroleum, machinery, information technology-enabled services and pharmaceuticals. • Highly regulated by govt. • Becoming more developed (57.2% GDP services, 28.6% industry), but over half of the population still works in agriculture • Growing gross national income but 76.2% live on under $2/day and 41.6% live under international poverty line of $1.25/day • Many lack access to clean water and sanitation

  12. Indian Cities vs. Rural Area • 30% live in cities • Over 40 cities with over a million people- largest are Delhi, Mumbai, Calcutta, Chennai, and Bangalore • Experiencing great growth • Home of growing middle class • Densely populated with congestion, noise, and great inequities • 70% live in villages • Over 500,000 villages, most are small but dense • Complex social structure- one or two castes control the land have power • Most villagers work in agriculture • Interdependence of residents • Often lack improved water source and modern sanitation

  13. Servants in India • Most middle class and upper class families have servants because they can afford it and view doing work manual work as undignified • Servants are sually young men and women from rural areas and of lower castes • Always on call • Generally paid $25-150 a month • Often overworked, exploited, and blamed for crimes committed nearby • Second-class member of the family for which they work

  14. Outsourcing to India • Part of the larger trend of globalization with workers competing on a flattened playing field • The practice in which part of a multinational company’s labor (usually manufacturing or services) is completed in an area in which costs are cheaper • 75% of US and European multinationals outsource some of their services • Largest outsourcing sector in India- IT • Workers paid 10-20% of American salaries for a given job

  15. India’s Government • Established after independence in 1947 • Secular republic of 28 states and 7 territories • Has executive, legislative, and judicial branches • Socialist with use of government regulation and subsidies • Problems of inefficiencyand corruption • Most spending doesn’t reach recipients • High absence rate of govt. workers • Corruption defines govt. actions

  16. Indiaand China • The most populous countries on Earth experiencing high rates of population and economic growth • But have very different social, political, and economic structures • Consider: • China has higher rates of education and literacy, life expectancy, vaccination rates, economic growth, higher GNP and energy consumption, and is more politically stable • India has greater access to free press and Internet, less reliance on international markets, greater wealth, greater numbers of English speakers, and is democratic

  17. China’s Government • The People’s Republic of China (since 1949) • Communist- the Communist Party controls the govt. and govt. decisions, authoritarian • Primary organs of state power- National People’s Congress (highest govt. body), President (head of state), and State Council • Continued political repression and limits on personal freedom to maintain party rule

  18. Wen Jiabo • Premier (head of State Council)- leading figure behind economic policy- since 2003 • 3rd highest member of Standing Committee (body with most power) • Oversaw Beijing Olympics, repression of Tibetans, decreased inflation, recovery from Sichuan Earthquake, great economic growth, and wants to bring China onto the world stage • Seen as the “popular premier”

  19. China’s Economy • In transition toward an industrialized, market economy • “a semi-planned economy” • “transformation from a rural to an urban society” • “an economy that is neither socialist nor properly capitalist, run by a party that is neither revolutionary nor subject to the normal constitutional checks and balances of even China’s own Confucian past, let alone the Asian or western present.” • Economic issues facing China: • Growing economic freedom with limited personal and political freedom • Population growth • Aging population • Growing need for resources • Urbanization and migrant workers • Environment • Corruption

  20. China in the Future

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