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| Planet India: The Turbulent Rise of the Largest Democracy and the Future of Our World | 
enlarge | Author: Mira Kamdar Publisher: Scribner Category: Book
List Price: $15.00 Buy New: $1.86 You Save: $13.14 (88%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 20 reviews Sales Rank: 149099
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 352 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.4 x 0.9
ISBN: 0743296869 Dewey Decimal Number: 330 EAN: 9780743296861 ASIN: 0743296869
Publication Date: February 19, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Ships SAME or NEXT business day. We Ship to APO/FPO addr. MAY have a remainder mark. Choose EXPEDITED shipping, receive in 2-5 business days. See our member profile for customer support contact info.
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Product Description India is everywhere: on magazine covers and cinema marquees, at the gym and in the kitchen, in corporate boardrooms and on Capitol Hill. Through incisive reportage and illuminating analysis, Mira Kamdar explores India's astonishing transformation from a developing country into a global powerhouse. She takes us inside India, reporting on the people, companies, and policies defining the new India and revealing how it will profoundly affect our future -- financially, culturally, politically.The world's fastest-growing democracy, India has the youngest population on the planet, and a middle class as big as the population of the entire United States. Its market has the potential to become the world's largest. As one film producer told Kamdar when they met in New York, "Who needs the American audience? There are only 300 million people here." Not only is India the ideal market for the next new thing, but with a highly skilled English-speaking workforce, elite educational institutions, and growing foreign investment, India is emerging as an innovator of the technology that is driving the next phase of the global economy. While India is celebrating its meteoric rise, it is also racing against time to bring the benefits of the twenty-first century to the 800 million Indians who live on less than two dollars per day, to find the sustainable energy to fuel its explosive economic growth, and to navigate international and domestic politics to ensure India's security and its status as a global power. India is the world in microcosm: the challenges it faces are universal -- from combating terrorism, poverty, and disease to protecting the environment and creating jobs. The urgency of these challenges for India is spurring innovative solutions, which will catapult it to the top of the new world order. If India succeeds, it will not only save itself, it will save us all. If it fails, we will all suffer. As goes India, so goes the world. Mira Kamdar tells the dramatic story of a nation in the midst of redefining itself and our world. Provocative, timely, and essential, Planet India is the groundbreaking book that will convince Americans just how high the stakes are -- what there is to lose, and what there is to gain from India's meteoric rise. DID YOU KNOW? India is the world's fourth-largest economy. By 2034, India will be the most populous country on Earth, with 1.6 billion people. India's middle class is already larger than the entire population of the United States. One out of three of the world's malnourished children live in India. India is home to the biggest youth population on earth: 600 million people are under the age of 25. 72,000,000 cell phones will be sold in India in 2007. India just edged past the United States to become the second-most-preferred destination for foreign direct investment after China. In 1991, Indians purchased 150,000 automobiles; in 2007, they are expected to purchase 10 million. By 2008, India's total pool of qualified graduates will be more than twice as large as China's. By 2015, an estimated 3.5 million white-collar U.S. jobs will be offshored. India is the largest arms importer in the developing world. American corporations expect to earn $20 to $40 billion from the civilian nuclear agreement with India. In 2007, there are 2.2 million Indian Americans, a number expected to double every decade. Twenty-nine percent of India's population speaks English -- that's 350 million people.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 15 more reviews...
a must read on India and the world February 24, 2007 25 out of 30 found this review helpful
If you agree that it is impossible to understand America's future without engaging with what is happening in the rest of the world, I urge you to read Planet India. Interviewing a wide range of people, from Bollywood movie producers to indebted farmers committing suicide to tea merchants and U.S. software engineers working in India, Mira gives the flavor of India today, tells how it got there, and gives a sense of where it is going along with what its decisions will mean for the entire planet. Mira is not afraid to break taboos, and she addresses both the tremendous optimism and potential in India as well as the Herculean challenges that the country faces. In Planet India, you'll get the human side of the story as well as that of the geo-political and economic implications of what is going on in India.
In my own work, I have written about the many Indian professionals make both entrepreneurial and philanthropic contributions to their country of birth. I also have had to tell the regrettable stories of many Indians who are contributing their tremendous skills to the United States but often have trouble negotiating our immigration bureaucracy, partly as a consequence of America's deep ambivalence about our relationship with the rest of the world. India's rise can be attributed in no small part to its leaders' understanding that engaging globally is the key to the future.
You also will want to check out Mira's beautiful first book, Motiba's Tattoos, which uses family memoir to shed light on history and the present.
Michele Wucker, Author of Lockout: Why America Keeps Getting Immigration Wrong When Our Prosperity Depends on Getting It Right (PublicAffairs Press, 2006)
Not a book, more of a gush July 15, 2007 10 out of 20 found this review helpful
Go visit India. Watch Bollywood movies. Don't read this book. Actually, Planet India is more of a gush than a book; a stream of vignettes reporting successes and failures of organizations and individuals caught up in India's economic revolution.
No analysis really. Much gullibility. I would say "uncritical" too, if it weren't for the unending attacks on America that fills the pages. Many of these are funny, in the way that the stuff that used to come out of Radio Tirana was funny. The U.S. government doesn't do enough for the unemployed, apparently, Kamdar tells us. If only we did things Ms. Kamdar's way, no doubt I wouldn't have to wade through destitute and economically tortured throngs singing "buddy can you spare a dime" every time I walk through the streets of Virginia. And, Kamdar tells us, in the U.S, yummy local food at yummy local restaurants has been pushed out by e-v-i-l fast food empires. This doesn't quite resonate with me, I'm afraid. I have been dining in small town mid-Atlantic America for 30 years now and can point Ms. Kamdar towards some very nice places to eat; a lot more than I could 20 years ago.
The point of all of this and other deep thoughts that Kamdar has on the state of contemporary America is that (according to Kamdar, anyway) India won't be doing wicked, wicked things like those outlined above. Indian businesses will be "doing well by doing good," which is a phrase that is repeated several times throughout the book. But isn't this an American phrase? And when Kamdar talks about the Indian entrepreneurs who give back to society, one is reminded that the quintessentially American plan for wealth making is to make as much money as possible and then give it all away. Few of Europe's wealthy would think this way, I suspect. This is why so many of them are socialists. It makes up for actually doing something.
But I digress. As one of the other reviewers here points out, there isn't much in Planet India that you wouldn't already know if you kept up with things Indian in the quality press; in the Economist, say. And a lot of what is in Kamdar's writing's you might have guessed anyway. It turns out that the Indian nouveau riche behave much like the nouveau riche in other countries; big surprise that!
Now, there are some interesting parts of Planet India. At one point Kamdar suggests that the religious mythology of India may have global meaning to international youth tuned in to the logic of comic superheroes. That is a genuinely novel idea and one that gets a couple of sentences in one chapter. The truly tragic stories of the farmers whose businesses have been ruined by the rise of Indian agribusiness are worth reading too.
But for the most part, Kamdar fills her pages with usual pieties about the environment, economic justice and democracy and at various points sounds like Gore-on-speed. It's just as well that she can spell "sustainability" and "corporate," since these words appear in almost every third sentence. (Not really, but it seems that way.) And in case you wondered, "sustainable," means "really, really good" and corporate means "really, really evil." "American corporate" means "really, really, truly, I'm not kidding you, you better believe me evil." It's the kind of thing that one might expect from a commentator at the BBC, CNN or NPR. And what do you know, Kamdar works for all three.
In the end, perhaps the most interesting thing in Kamdar's writing's is what she does not say. She doesn't talk much about how the scaling back of socialism in India was what caused the Indian boom in the first place. And it would be interesting to know, just what proportion of the Indian elite shares her trendy, lefty view of the world. Unfortunately, I suspect the proportion is high.
But let's hope I am wrong. One thing that Kamdar is right about is that what India does is important to everyone in the world. And the more India turns to capitalism the better it will be for all of us.
Not a well written or thought out book March 24, 2007 9 out of 22 found this review helpful
This book is full of gross, sensational stories that if you follow India 10% of the time you will know about. The author jumped on the India bandwagon to make a buck. No one is denying that India has poverty, gender issues, health issues etc - but by lumping every Indian state together and every Indian together shows that the author doesn't understand the diversity India has or the purpose of India.
Read a book by an academic to understand India - there are many out there - Mira should have done that first instead of reading news articles.
I nearly gave up on this book about 1/3 through.... July 30, 2007 9 out of 10 found this review helpful
...but then it really got good. The first 1/3 of the book is full of gee-whiz statistics on growth. It is also full of what I call "Reader's Digest" subchapters that gush excessively, in the genre of: ("Mr. X ushered me into his elegant office, high above the immaculate tech campus. Sales grew at 83% last year, mainly due to American outsourcing...") or ("the girls upon graduation could produce PowerPoint presentations;") just what the world needs more of.
Then we get into the really great parts of the book. All of India's shortcomings are examined realistically, from pollution of the groundwater and air, caste differences, religious hatred, a dozen or two languages, the bomb, the lack of any real education or medical care or opportunity for most of the vast population, corruption, the suppression of women, lack of electricity and airports, global warming, ethnic uprisings, Pakistan, China, etc, and no punches are pulled.
In short there is a real question as to whether success in India will be like success in Mexico: a widening gap between rich and poor that grows worse each decade. Several reviewers have inferred from the book that global success for India is inevitable. Perhaps, but not necessarily.
The book is really superb. I liken it to "Guns, Germs, and Steel" which explained how physical and cultural geography determined why certain areas of the globe prospered in centuries past. Planet India gives us the physical and cultural elements to try and deduce India's future. Frankly, it's not looking good, except for a small oligarchic class. But good luck to them, and good luck to America.
Just because I am not as positive on the outcome does not make this book any less fascinating. Enjoy!
A great introduction to India July 26, 2007 8 out of 10 found this review helpful
This is really a great book not to miss. India might very well be the political balance to China when the United States declines and eventually falls.
I did go to Bombay some years back for a friends wedding, but I honestly never viewed India as a major economic or military power. Poverty was rampant, and I heard of stories of families killing female babies because they are a financial drain to them (infanticide).
Corruption is also rampant in India, and the author tells the stories of famous Indians who were harassed when they spoke out against corruption. Corruption is rampant in my country as well and I learnt to keep my mouth shut.
The author points out the many tragic challenges facing Indians. HIV is a major problem in India now, with probably 20 million Indians already infected with AIDS. Poverty, infanticide, corruption, and crime are problems that can be solved through education, caring, and policing. India can easily surmount those challenges if the government puts its mind to it.
India is now a nuclear nation, and this worries some that this could lead to an arms race, especially with Pakistan and China. The US is counting on India as a military balance in the region. There has been many instances where the possibility of nuclear war between India and Pakistan was at a critical point.
India is the world's fastest-growing democracy. It also has the youngest population on the planet, and a middle class as big as the population of the entire United States. Its market has the potential to become the world's largest. As one film producer said, "Who needs the American audience? There are only 300 million people here."
Although most Indians highly respected the US in the 90s, most dont anymore after Bush junior took office. Many are against the offensive strategies of the US, especially the war in Iraq.
The number of American Indians is increasing, which is giving India a powerful voice in its lobbying attempts in Washington. Some say Indias lobbyist in D.C. will attain the power of the Jewish lobbyists in the near future.
The author does warn that India must not follow the American system, but rather invent its own. That concept is very interesting.
I was fascinated by the chapter on how polluted the water is in some regions of India, and of the thousands who die as a result of poisoning and of cancer. According to the author, this water pollution has entered packaged food.
There are also stories of suicides due to the inability to pay back loan sharks who charge 10% a month!
The author also describes how in cities the rich live next to poor neighborhoods and manage to completely ignore them or pretend like they did not exist. The nature of man is the same everywhere.
Here are some facts about India taken from the books back cover:
India is the world's fourth-largest economy.
By 2034, India will be the most populous country on Earth, with 1.6 billion people.
One out of three of the world's malnourished children live in India.
600 million people are under the age of 25.
72,000,000 cell phones will be sold in India in 2007.
India just edged past the United States to become the second-most-preferred destination for foreign direct investment after China.
In 1991, Indians purchased 150,000 automobiles; in 2007, they are expected to purchase 10 million.
By 2008, India's total pool of qualified graduates will be more than twice as large as China's.
By 2015, an estimated 3.5 million white-collar U.S. jobs will be offshored.
India is the largest arms importer in the developing world.
American corporations expect to earn $20 to $40 billion from the civilian nuclear agreement with India.
In 2007, there are 2.2 million Indian Americans, a number expected to double every decade.
Twenty-nine percent of India's population speaks English -- that's 350 million people.
One reviewer on amazon.com had the following to say:
"This book reads more like a dream of what India could be rather than an objective assessment of what it is. It is proof that Indians continue to suffer from a serious inferiority complex with the constant need to assert their "greatness" without down-to-earth critical assessment of reality facing the country."
I personally enjoyed this book and highly recommend it.
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