Koinonia House Online   “Bringing the world into focus
through the lens of Scripture”
Koinonia House 
Online
Koinonia House 
Online Koinonia House Online Koinonia House Online
 Home > Articles > 2006 > Current Events > International > The Rise Of India
First Time Here?  
Site Search


Advanced Search

Information
Articles
Strategic Trends
Event Calendar
eNews Archive

Audio/Video
66/40 Radio Show
Special Events
Radio Schedule
MP3 Files
K-Rations

Bible Study
Featured Study
Topical Studies
Koinonia Institute
Joy of Teaching God's Word

Koinonia Institute
StudyCenter.com
About the Institute
Available Courses
Student Login
KITV

Shopping
Online Store
Australian Store
New Zealand Store
Africa Store

Publications
Personal Update
Weekly eNews

Related Sites
King's High Way
Blue Letter Bible
E-Sword.net
Other Links

Other Info
FAQ's
About Us
Contact Us
International
Tell a Friend

KITV Koinonia House Online

Koinonia House Online

Kings of the East, Part 2

The Rise of India

by Chuck Missler

PURSUE THIS TOPIC:

RESOURCES

ARTICLES

RADIO SHOWS

WEEKLY eNEWS

STRATEGIC TRENDS

[Ed note: Last month we highlighted the ''rise of China'' in our article, ''The Kings of the East.'' This month we’ll take a look at what may be an overlooked giant rising in the East: India.]

President Bush’s trip to India last month showcased that country’s sizzling rise to become a top producer in the global marketplace: India has the second fastest-growing major economy in the world over the past 15 years and in recent years trails only China and the United States in its contribution to global gross domestic product (GPD) growth.

Before Bush’s visit - and the media spotlight that follows him - few people realized the remarkable emergence of India in the global technological culture. Yet, their research and development centers are sprouting everywhere and are the seedbeds of the most advanced software platforms, multimedia devices, and other next-generation innovations.

Major companies, such as Motorola, Hewlett-Packard, and Cisco Systems, are looking to laboratories in India for their most advanced product developments. Their advanced 3-D computer simulations are tweaking designs for car engines and aircraft wings for clients like General Motors and Boeing. India’s Bangalore Research Hub is spawning companies that produce their own chip designs, software, and pharmaceuticals.

Daniel Sheinman, Cisco Systems’ senior vice president for corporate development, declares, ''We came to India for the costs, we stayed for the quality, and we’re now investing for the innovation.''

Just as China has emerged as a mass manufacturer, India is emerging as a giant in services. Technical and managerial strengths in both China and India are becoming more important that cheap assembly labor. And, their relative strengths are complementary, not competitive. For example, China has excelled in mass manufacturing, with multi-billion-dollar electronics and heavy industrial plants; India has specialized in software, design, services, and precision industry. Their efficiency in back-office processing alone is legendary and outsourcing such work is expected to quadruple by 2010 to over $56 billion per year!

These two emerging giants will transform the entire global economy. China and India account for one-third of the world’s population. For the past two decades, China has been growing at 9.5% per year, and India at 6% per year. Both are projected to continue at an annual rate of 7-8% for at least the next ten years. By mid-century, China should overtake the U.S. as #1. Together, China and India could account for almost half of the total global output.

This is, in some ways, analogous to 19th century America, when a young, driven workforce grabbed the lead in agriculture, apparel, and the high-tech innovations of that era: steam engines, the telegraph, and electric lights. Similarly, these two emerging giants are positioning themselves at the vanguard of the critical technologies of the coming decades.

India’s younger workforce will give it a chance to catch up to China. Due to its one-child policy, China’s working age population will peak at 1 billion in 2015 and then shrink steadily. India has nearly 500 million people (twice the population of the U.S.) under the age of 19 and higher fertility rates. By mid-century, India is expected to have 1.6 billion people, 220 million more workers than China.

We will review more of these developments in our featured briefing package, The Kings of the East, available this month on DVD as well as audio cassett and CD formats. See the following page for details. We should all aspire to be like the ''sons of Issachar,'' who understood the times and knew what they had to do (1 Chr 12:32).


**FOR A MORE IN-DEPTH STUDY**

Kings of the East - DVD - Chuck Missler

What are the prophetic implications of the King's of the East and their rise as a world superpower?

Click for more information - DVD


**RELATED ARTICLES FROM KOINONIA HOUSE**

The Centroid Continues Westward: The Kings of the East - Chuck Missler

The Rise of Asia: An Overlooked "King of the East"? - Chuck Missler


**RELATED RADIO SHOWS FROM KOINONIA HOUSE**

Strategic Trends 2004 - ''The Times Of The Signs''

With the wealth of information at our fingertips, it is sometimes hard to see the forest for the trees. With these Strategic Briefings we will give you a current perspective on the 10 trends that shape our world and their relevance to Biblical Prophecy. Now, more than ever, we need to stay informed about what is really going on. As we look eastward, the prophetic skyline is taking on the tones of the fiery end-times scenario predicted in God's Inspired Word.


**RELATED WEEKLY eNEWS ARTICLES FROM KOINONIA HOUSE**

India Reforms - June 8, 2004

The Growing Israel-India-U.S. Alliance - August 12, 2003


**RELATED STRATEGIC TRENDS FROM KOINONIA HOUSE**

The Rise of the Far East - China's Emergent Superpower Status, India's meteoric rise on the global scene.

Once content with isolationism, China is now asserting itself as a global, fully-communist nuclear superpower. With its eye on reclaiming Taiwan, and strategic alliances with Russia and North Korea, China can no longer be ignored.

India, an overlooked giant rising in the east, has the second fastest-growing major economy in the world over the past 15 years and in recent years trails only China and the United States in its contribution to global gross domestic product (GPD) growth.

Koinonia House Online

Featured Video

Strategic Trends 09 Volume 2 -DVD
Strategic Trends 09 Volume 2
Updated 2009 Chuck Missler reviews the following strategic trends, the Rise of the European Super State, Global Pestilence, The America Challenge, Global Religion, The Rise of the Far East, Global Government and Energy.

Get More Info


Beyond Perception
Audio CD with MP3

Why do scientists now believe we live in a 10-dimensional universe?

Get More Info »

Koinonia House Online
Koinonia House Online
Koinonia House Online

Koinonia Institute
Privacy Policy

Copyright © 1996-2009 by Koinonia House Inc., P.O. Box D, Coeur d'Alene, ID 83816