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| India Overview |
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South Asia is often referred to as the Indian Subcontinent because its land
mass broke away from the southern part of Africa more than 65 million years
ago, drifted north, and "collided" with the Asian land mass to become part of
Asia. The upheaval along the lines of the collision that occurred over millions
of years (and is still continuing) led to the formation of the world's tallest
mountain range - the Himalayas. The volcanic activity that occurred on the
subcontinent during its northward drift is linked to the extinction of 98% of
the species on earth at that time, including the dinosaurs, and resulted in the
formation of the Deccan plateau - among the largest igneous regions of the
world covering most of peninsular India.
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Aboriginal and tribal populations lived in India long before recorded history,
which begins with archeological evidence of the Dravidian civilization dating
through the 3rd to the 2nd millennium BC. Aryan tribes drifted into the
subcontinent in the 2nd millennium from the region of the Caspian Sea, bringing
with them Vedic traditions, the Hindu religion, and Sanskrit - a language of
the Indo-European group that has common roots with early Persian and Latin.
India was a patchwork of monarchies and republics in the 7th century BC when
Siddhartha was born in one of the royal families and went on to become the
Buddha - founder of the Buddhist religion that is followed in many parts of
Asia.
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Most of the country was united under one administration for the first time
during the Maurya period that reached its zenith under Ashoka in the 3rd
century BC. The first half of the 1st millennium AD was a period of relative
peace, prosperity, and economic achievement when India accounted for about a
third of world GDP. The country assimilated waves of Muslim invaders and
immigrants from the north and northwest during the latter part of the 1st
millennium AD and well into the 2nd. The last of these were the Moghuls who
ruled large parts of the country from the 16th to the 18th century, bringing
variety and leaving behind indelible influences on myriad aspects of social and
civic life, from language and religion to the arts, handicrafts, and
architecture. Trade, industry, and commerce did well and India was still the
world's single largest economy in the early part of the 18th century,
accounting for 20-25% of world GDP.
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The British, together with other Europeans, began as traders in India in the
17th century and ended up ruling and administering the country. The 190 years
of British occupation helped the country integrate through nationwide railways
and telecommunications, national institutions such as the judiciary, postal
services, national armed forces, administrative services, and the national
movement for independence. Many of the national institutions today remain a
legacy of the British administration, in some instances with little change over
the years. However, British rule did ruin the economy - the country was unable
to keep pace with the rest of the world and accounted for merely 4% of world
GDP at the time of Independence in 1947.
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British rule ended disastrously, with the partition of the country. Independent
India, although secular and democratic, struggled to kick-start the economy.
The government invested heavily in industry while inadvertently stifling
private enterprise in its endeavor to redistribute wealth. The country was
perceived to be pro-communist during the cold war and leaned more heavily
leftward in the 1960s and 70s. Nationalization, the opposite of privatization,
resulted in the government taking over and monopolizing large domains of
economic activity including mining,insurance, and the banking system. Product
patents for chemicals and pharmaceuticals were abolished in a bid to bring down
prices and make drugs affordable for the poor - a move that eventually
succeeded beyond expectation. Price controls were also introduced on essential
drugs irrespective of whether these were imported or locally produced. Curbs on
private enterprise led to the "License-Permit Raj" - big government, and an
enormous bureaucracy. Although public investments made from international
borrowing, and the ingenuity of private entrepreneurs in adverse circumstances
ensured that the economy kept growing, even if at a "Hindu pace", India's share
of the world economy had fallen to 3% by 1973.
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A balance-of-payments crisis in 1991 led to the first wave of purposeful
liberalization. The ill-conceived policies of previous decades were reversed
and the economy gathered momentum. Signing the GATT/WTO Agreement in the
mid-1990s brought the country into the era of globalization, helped along by
the coming of age of telecommunications and the Internet. Government
investments in higher education made in the 1950s and 60s began to pay off at
last as information technology boomed. Liberalization unleashed latent
entrepreneurial instincts and led to the growth of start-ups in the new
economy. The GDP growth rate picked up to 10.4% in the last quarter of 2003,
beating China for the first time in a long time. WTO-led lifting of quota
restrictions, intellectual property protection for chemicals and
pharmaceuticals, a demographic dividend, and further doses of fiscal and
macroeconomic liberalization are expected to generate sustained growth and rise
in income levels. By the mid-twenties India is expected to be the third largest
economy after China and the United States.
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