What India’s Population Surpassing China’s Means for Global Economies | WSJ

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  • čas přidán 9. 06. 2024
  • China has been the most populous country for more than two centuries - until this month. India's population may have surpassed China’s, a milestone that some believe heralds a new global order. How much can the world economy continue to rely on China’s vast pool of factory workers for manufactured goods?
    WSJ examines what this shift in population for India and China could mean for the future of each country, as well as the entire global economy.
    0:00 India’s population is expected to double China’s by the start of the next century
    1:03 Why is China’s population shrinking?
    2:49 What China’s population decline means for the global economy
    3:55 What India’s growing population will mean for its role in global affairs
    WSJ Explains
    News moves fast, and there's not always time to untangle the complex forces driving the day's biggest stories. WSJ Explains breaks down big market moves, business and economic trends, and scientific developments to help you stay ahead of the curve.
    #India #China #WSJ

Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @lord_of_love_and_thunder
    @lord_of_love_and_thunder Před rokem +761

    The video points out that 70% of India’s population lives in rural areas, yet all TV networks rely on that one set of images from a super dense Indian city to represent India.

    • @pratheekhp2222
      @pratheekhp2222 Před rokem +187

      I don’t know how old clip is this probably from 2000s around some market in Delhi or Mumbai and whenever India comes they show this clip .. crazy

    • @gamer-ff6mh
      @gamer-ff6mh Před rokem +5

      True. But the thing is that cities extract wealth from the villages. Therefore that picture makes sense.

    • @lord_of_love_and_thunder
      @lord_of_love_and_thunder Před rokem +74

      @@gamer-ff6mh Its the very opposite in India. Three of the four largest ministries in India, consumer affairs, agriculture and rural development all transfer tax revenue generated in the cities to India’s villages.

    • @MegaAshfire
      @MegaAshfire Před rokem +15

      @@gamer-ff6mh false , farming is a tax burden

    • @OkarinHououinKyouma
      @OkarinHououinKyouma Před rokem +26

      ​@@gamer-ff6mh india is an exception. Villages consume more (Welfare schemes)

  • @anuragc1565
    @anuragc1565 Před rokem +682

    It kinda feels weird when you realise you wouldn't be there till 2100 to experience all that...😮

    • @darkorange835
      @darkorange835 Před rokem +47

      2100? My man i am still living in 2020

    • @archismaanrudra876
      @archismaanrudra876 Před rokem +38

      Maybe I will top 2060 , that's all.

    • @darkorange835
      @darkorange835 Před rokem +13

      @@archismaanrudra876 good number good number

    • @jatinrajvanshi4832
      @jatinrajvanshi4832 Před rokem +11

      We will have a nice sleep.

    • @jioboy2676
      @jioboy2676 Před rokem +14

      This is our timeline...sadly it is this timeline...that will be most challenging.
      But we can enjoy while we r still alive...amid a lot of challenges

  • @hank561
    @hank561 Před rokem +422

    I feel weird when I see the 2070 graph people over 65 again and again.
    The fact that I am included in that graph somehow makes me feel old and I am just 19.

    • @bodaciousskies
      @bodaciousskies Před rokem

      Weird asf bro. Hope you dont grow up a weirdo

    • @sjjsjsjxjcjcdhddh
      @sjjsjsjxjcjcdhddh Před rokem +1

      op😊

    • @imranshaik2282
      @imranshaik2282 Před rokem +15

      65 will be 45 in 2070 considering the advancements in health we will make in next 4 decades

    • @YashSharma-iv7ok
      @YashSharma-iv7ok Před rokem +1

      Same! Here.

    • @hamzamahmood9565
      @hamzamahmood9565 Před rokem +2

      ​@@imranshaik2282 See man this is what gives me hope. My dream is to live healthy until 2100, and witness all the great achievements of humanity in this century!!!

  • @manasvitrivedi9657
    @manasvitrivedi9657 Před rokem +228

    Just a small suggestion, the footage used of India seems to be many years old, our streets are not always dust filled, with people carrying luggage over their heads and with half broken vehicles on the road. WSJ is a large platform, please do right by the places you cover on the world scale.

    • @gauranggoradia7303
      @gauranggoradia7303 Před rokem +78

      It is unfortunate but it is likely on purpose and serves their interest. NYTimes projects India in an even worse manner.

    • @PAPA.PARDESI
      @PAPA.PARDESI Před rokem +58

      western propaganda wont end i have been seeing it for last 20 yrs, dont expect anything from them

    • @MEOWMALE-mo1ze
      @MEOWMALE-mo1ze Před rokem +23

      And China like CyberPunk

    • @mahender1
      @mahender1 Před rokem

      It's a narrative by western media outlets I see these patterns in all of them

    • @bhavikasicka7871
      @bhavikasicka7871 Před rokem +20

      Idk about you but living in Kolkata, this is pretty much a daily scene. You don't have to be in Sealdah station to see this; just drive through Park Circus or Behala. I know what you're trying to say, images such as these perpetuate 'third world' stereotypes of India as still underdeveloped, but we are an overpopulated postcolonial nation with many migrant workers still highly exploited, precarious, and poor, and regardless of whether our middle class throngs malls with shopping bags or our "lower class" on streets with luggage over their heads, the reality is that we are still treating ourselves and each other, performatively, as obedient capitalist workers, slave ants -- and personally, the images of malls seem the most dystopian and depressing.

  • @KD9-37
    @KD9-37 Před rokem +284

    One way India can do right by its people is by investing heavily in its infrastructure and then relying on businesses (in-house and external) that will care about ethical and humanitarian issues and not be solely driven by profits. But the lack of infrastructure and huge unskilled workforce is no net positive.

    • @rishav2205
      @rishav2205 Před rokem +38

      Infrastructure is growing now faster compared to other decades(urban transit, expressways,institutions etc) main problem or fear is increasing rate of unemployment which will never solve completely atleast not in near future to defeat unemployment it should grow 18% which is nearly impossible.

    • @KD9-37
      @KD9-37 Před rokem +8

      @@rishav2205 Wow, well i think if we build infrastructure even faster we would create relatively more employment through contruction itself but also help create an ecosystm for people to create and build more businesses which would create more employment, however the other major issue is the lack of skilled workforce who is able to compete with increasing cost effective technological solutions hence why i say the future employment lies in the effort of ethical and humanitarian driven businesses more.
      With the metric you offered makes me think India shuld seriously enact a population control policy because not doing so will only ensure more people will suffer more in coming decades...but maybe im wrong im not aware of all the metrics of the economy on the macro level.

    • @rishav2205
      @rishav2205 Před rokem +4

      @@KD9-37 yeah we should have more businesses that can generate employment but another positive is happening that many companies are going setup industries in future.

    • @DS-vx3wf
      @DS-vx3wf Před rokem +10

      India is already doing that... foreign investment in India has increased as well! India is where China was 10-12 years ago. 50% of India is still living close to poverty line and hopefully these investments will push them away from poverty!

    • @kaustubhraizada
      @kaustubhraizada Před rokem +5

      @@DS-vx3wf only 25%

  • @christyag1177
    @christyag1177 Před rokem +62

    If India keeps focus on Infra growth, they would be able to achieve mountains

    • @sridhar.v4855
      @sridhar.v4855 Před rokem +12

      India has 6 million kilometres of road connectivity and this is more than China’s 5 million kilometres! So we are already leaders in road infra.

    • @andrya20
      @andrya20 Před rokem +8

      @@sridhar.v4855 yes with so much potholes (I'm Indian)

    • @sridhar.v4855
      @sridhar.v4855 Před rokem +5

      @QRF India has 1 lane to 14 lane highways!

    • @Superpooper-2020
      @Superpooper-2020 Před rokem +1

      Maj0rity 0f us Inddians still d0nt have access t0 t0ilet

    • @balckston
      @balckston Před rokem

      As we can see their higher speed railroad project. Roughly estimate another 20 to 30 years to complete.

  • @darkorange835
    @darkorange835 Před rokem +317

    Right now i believe India should focus on investing in infrastructure that will boost in connecting the states of India and its economies. The economy of China is extremely connected and even tho they might speak different languages (similar writing script but different pronounciation) they have been able to create a system that is extremely efficient. Once India can fix it's infra problem they can allow the economy to grow even more as now India can supply itself and pay itself and grow it's domestic market while producing goods that might entice the global market.

    • @datta3268
      @datta3268 Před rokem +70

      Which is exactly what's happening, There's been a lot of focus on infra growth for the past few years. I believe it's the right timing.

    • @jioboy2676
      @jioboy2676 Před rokem +24

      Just investing Infra is Not enough...there has to be people and businesses (both small n big) to utilise that infra to do more business and for other convenience.

    • @jidujku_ff7westfalen13
      @jidujku_ff7westfalen13 Před rokem +9

      ​@@eJohndoe social liberalism
      Has no much space in Indian thoughts even such words aren't familiar

    • @hirenahir76200
      @hirenahir76200 Před rokem

      True

    • @hirenahir76200
      @hirenahir76200 Před rokem +2

      They need to unite there people more

  • @KnightWithAnAssaultRifle
    @KnightWithAnAssaultRifle Před rokem +88

    😂😂 it's always fascinating how the western media portrays India and Indian cities with highly dense images of old towns like dude there are more places to show population 😆 as a normal Indian we don't usually see these kinds of crowds or slums like these media houses portray

    • @kunalwadkar9336
      @kunalwadkar9336 Před rokem +8

      😂😂😂 looting other and showing poor side i mean its in 2015 footage still they showing this

    • @VeritasVortex
      @VeritasVortex Před rokem +3

      Don't like it? Then renovate those buildings and areas

    • @d-katsu8931
      @d-katsu8931 Před rokem +9

      ​@@VeritasVortex They are already been done. They still use such old clips. Even we Indians don't see this India now. It has all changed.

    • @VeritasVortex
      @VeritasVortex Před rokem +6

      @@d-katsu8931 stop lying. There are thousands areas like this all over India. I would know because I went there a month ago

    • @me_debankan4178
      @me_debankan4178 Před rokem

      ​@@VeritasVortexstop lying ....

  • @NaveenNT
    @NaveenNT Před rokem +159

    In India most of the graduates from colleges do not have sufficient skills. Majority colleges in India are just diploma producing mills. Also there is lack of quality paid jobs for many leading to a scramble for government jobs. Well off or the smart people take off to western countries for greener pastures. It's not all doom and gloom but that there are many problems which need to be urgently addressed

    • @bngr_bngr
      @bngr_bngr Před rokem +8

      Deloitte has sent 50,000 professional jobs to India. We call India Region 10.

    • @farazsyed8264
      @farazsyed8264 Před rokem

      @@bngr_bngr which country is region 1?

    • @bngr_bngr
      @bngr_bngr Před rokem +2

      @@farazsyed8264 we used regions to divide the US. But we made up Region 10 so we could transfer expenses to the US. As we didn’t allow India to show a profit.

    • @gamer-ff6mh
      @gamer-ff6mh Před rokem +14

      Flee to foreign nations is a better terminology. Why not educate some kids here? Very few of kids going abroad that I know are smart. They are all there due to financial or social capital. So much so that I rejected my opportunity and decided to stay back and stay back. Maybe I will teach only a thousand kids in my lifetime. So be it. Better that than a meaningless life of hoarding money and handing it over to foreign nations for buying a degree ticket to their jobs

    • @surojeetchatterji9966
      @surojeetchatterji9966 Před rokem +4

      @@bngr_bngr I think India will shift from Information Technology coolie jobs gradually make their own brands or buy the brands from California.

  • @byduhlusional
    @byduhlusional Před rokem +168

    I'm applying for software jobs and so many positions I see open are hiring people from within India. Would not surprise me if they become a tech superpower (which I guess some people view it as already there, but that's debatable)

    • @ThisDugan
      @ThisDugan Před rokem +44

      Tons of companies hire Indian employees to do lower level jobs. If you have had the chance to work with them, I don’t think you would think this though.
      They’re super talented and bright, but they generally will only do exactly as told and don’t propose independent ideas. It can often be frustrating as someone from the US where independent thought and innovation is highly sought after and stressed.

    • @Icetor01
      @Icetor01 Před rokem +26

      ​@@ThisDugan I think workplace culture partly plays a role: things are fairly hierarchical, so lower-level employees aren't really encouraged/incentivized to innovate.

    • @Fishmans
      @Fishmans Před rokem +26

      India needs to get rid of its lingering caste biases first. There have been countless cases of Indian workers in foreign companies refusing to listen to their manager because the boss comes from a lower caste, or even more egregiously, the manager willingly submitting to being bullied by their underlings due to his inferior social position. That is ridiculous, and must be stamped out.

    • @zodiacsama7693
      @zodiacsama7693 Před rokem +23

      ​@@Fishmans huh how when?

    • @harieeshrakhavandaran
      @harieeshrakhavandaran Před rokem +19

      @@Fishmans where is this story come from

  • @caamitinfinite
    @caamitinfinite Před rokem +14

    Wrong Map of India in Thumbnail. Indian Territory Shown as Chinese.

    • @caamitinfinite
      @caamitinfinite Před rokem +1

      @蔡English Is that what you are taught in china schools. what about Arunachal Pradesh and Tibet. Taiwan, Hong Kong. Bhutan & South china sea ?

    • @everbeentohellareyou7004
      @everbeentohellareyou7004 Před rokem

      ​@@caamitinfinite Taiwan u mean republic of china Hong Kong u mean Sar of china tibet u mean province of china south china sea is calimed by all countries not only by china

  • @AjayTiwari-en9nz
    @AjayTiwari-en9nz Před rokem +138

    There is no way India will ever touch 1.7 billion. The fertility rate of India is now 1.9 in 2023 and is declining at the rate of 7-8% per annum. India's population will peak around 1.6 billion between 2050-2055 and then decline to 900 million by 2100. At the same time, China's population will not be 750 million but somewhere between 500-550 million.

    • @X1GenKaneShiroX
      @X1GenKaneShiroX Před rokem +17

      Some sources says that by 2100
      India: 1,500,000,000 people
      China: 750,000,000 people

    • @ccx22
      @ccx22 Před rokem +34

      Those are just projections and models, could be wrong entirely

    • @roctechproductions
      @roctechproductions Před rokem

      True that bro

    • @AshishSingh-ut6fk
      @AshishSingh-ut6fk Před rokem +21

      1.9 fertility rate of India? Where did you get this data from?? It's still more than 2.1.
      And not to mention the fact that India has millions of illegal/undocumented immigrants from much more densely populated neighbor Bangladesh, plus Rohingyas. It never seemed they would be deported in future and rather would get regularised here over time and these people have high fertility rates. And, densely populated states like Bihar and eastern UP still maintains fertility rate over 3 even now. So, touching a figure of 1.7 billion seems no unrealistic to me.

    • @riturajkartik4299
      @riturajkartik4299 Před rokem

      Totally fake 2080 India population 2 billion

  • @appooxevwo5111
    @appooxevwo5111 Před rokem +20

    Hey WSJ, Thank you for showing India as a one big market street. We Indians never go out without atleast 10k people already on the street. Please we are a developing nation not a poor country

  • @ttemp2631
    @ttemp2631 Před rokem +94

    smaller higher skilled and educated population means a bright future. large unskilled and uneducated population means a miserable future

    • @arifahmedkhan9999
      @arifahmedkhan9999 Před rokem +10

      Means the powerhouse will shift.
      China became the factory of the world and so it became rich.
      If china's population shrinks people will look elsewhere for cheap labor.
      Obviously that is what brings in the money

    • @sauravyadav6191
      @sauravyadav6191 Před rokem +6

      small rich population doesn't last for long.

    • @nex05
      @nex05 Před rokem

      If you think that, you probably aren't familiar with chinese history and how large population benefitted it so much that it is standing next to USA

    • @ttemp2631
      @ttemp2631 Před rokem +8

      @@sauravyadav6191 it last long for Luxemburg and Switserland

    • @melvinf78
      @melvinf78 Před rokem

      @@arifahmedkhan9999 China is installing more industrial robots than the rest of the world combined. Manufacturing won't leave China. And ChatGPT is rapidly replacing remote service jobs Indian are good at. India's younger generation is doomed.

  • @gerardo5047
    @gerardo5047 Před rokem +90

    Nothing against India but if take into account AI will replace many jobs in the next future and you have a enormous unskilled population this looks like more like burden than a advantage. Just look at Pakistan and Nigeria both surpassed Brazil population but that doesn't mean anything if they don't have proper infrastructure a good system of education and most people live in poverty.

    • @pratikpatil6342
      @pratikpatil6342 Před rokem +9

      Manufacturing won't be automated or AI ed soon it will take time.

    • @jioboy2676
      @jioboy2676 Před rokem +33

      @@pratikpatil6342 Many types of Manufacturing facilities have been automated and will be auto mated.
      Just look at the amount of auto mation Car factories have...look at how much they were automated 20 yrs ago and now

    • @pratikpatil6342
      @pratikpatil6342 Před rokem +14

      @Jio Boy Yea, yet industry needs labor. My point was all can't be automated soon.

    • @gamer-ff6mh
      @gamer-ff6mh Před rokem +4

      ​@@pratikpatil6342 Well those jobs will just be verification jobs. Like you have the watchman outside the supermarket who stamps on your bill without actually checking properly because the machine is anyways right and it has already verified the goods are proper and nothing is stolen

    • @_devil536
      @_devil536 Před rokem +16

      I work in automation
      And believe me no one is gonna replace men for a long time
      The only thing AI is gonna do is build things more efficiently ultimately jobs will shift towards service and leisure which is the trend from lst 3 industrial revolution

  • @armenstaubach9276
    @armenstaubach9276 Před rokem +19

    They talk about population like it’s wealth! We need low population with higher pay and better living standards

    • @ArmageddonIsHere
      @ArmageddonIsHere Před rokem

      ​@@JustLazloOfficial
      Thank goodness neither of you has had any economics education....

    • @kabirkhan9901
      @kabirkhan9901 Před 11 měsíci

      @@JustLazloOfficial and the same is now

  • @AshishSingh-ut6fk
    @AshishSingh-ut6fk Před rokem +85

    If the economic rise and development is guaranteed by the rise of population, then the most densely populated state of Bihar in India would have been more fairly developed instead of being one of the most impoverished states in India.

    • @AshishSingh-ut6fk
      @AshishSingh-ut6fk Před rokem +3

      @Tyt Xlx At the same time, Bihar also need to work on some cultural reforms to check it's fertility rate which is more than 3 and highest in India.
      Apart from this, I don't think power sharing should be completely loose free as per the population ratio shared by the states as the equal representation and opportunity of the diverse federal states based on their linguistic and cultural identity needs to be guaranteed to some extent by some mechanism regardless of their population size. Else, smaller distinct states in India would practically loose their voice in the parliament.

    • @ArmageddonIsHere
      @ArmageddonIsHere Před rokem

      That is such a GENIUS observation!👏👏👏
      Would never have occurred to the rest of is idiots without your insight!
      Thank you very much!

    • @Lesgogi
      @Lesgogi Před rokem

      Bihar corruption and gender inequality plays a huge role

    • @rleon832
      @rleon832 Před rokem +1

      Wow what a comment Ashish! You come a long way from your school days.

    • @sumeettanwar1608
      @sumeettanwar1608 Před rokem

      Its was till 18th century.

  • @TJSaw
    @TJSaw Před rokem +47

    “A nation becomes great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they will never get to sit in.”
    Come on, fellow Indians! Let’s work hard today to make sure our children and grandchildren enjoy a life of prosperity tomorrow. 🇮🇳

    • @hkiajtaqks5253
      @hkiajtaqks5253 Před rokem

      But history tells us that a nation becomes great when it loots the world for a few centuries.

    • @GM_-
      @GM_- Před rokem +3

      ​@Tyt Xlx 200 million Indian Muslims should just disappear then? Three hundred years of Mughal rule be swept under the carpet? 😂

    • @TJSaw
      @TJSaw Před 10 měsíci

      @@GM_- While I don’t support a Hindu rashtra per se, it doesn’t mean Muslims will just disappear. Muslims have lived and thrived in Hindu rashtras of India for hundreds of years. You have a misconception about Hinduism.

    • @KiranK-bi7ek
      @KiranK-bi7ek Před měsícem

      Dream

  • @X1GenKaneShiroX
    @X1GenKaneShiroX Před rokem +42

    It is asinine that India will have more people than China this decade. Also, this is unrelated, but it really saddens me a lot that in several China vs. India military comparison videos, many YT users support India over China and that so many YT users belittle China and their army. China seems to get way too much hate, while India gets too much support and pride. I can literally list 1K comments that support India and 1K comments that dislike China. I heard words such as "Jai Hind India" and "Support India from Japan". China always seems to carry the burden of hate in many YT videos, very unfair.

    • @good-tn9sr
      @good-tn9sr Před rokem +6

      mainly cause of the CCP. Also India is seen as the underdog, though I guess not anymore soon as they are one of the fastest developing countries in the world now due to relatively large infusion into infrastructure and pro capitalist reforms. But don’t be sad man, the West also has its own problems and I know as i live here 😂

    • @getgaijoobed6219
      @getgaijoobed6219 Před rokem

      That’s what listening to sensationalized “free” media does to people. Common sense and fact checking goes out the window because of hate, confirmation bias, etc. I saw a video the other day claiming that India’s new STOBAR carrier was “better” than the new Chinese CATOBAR carrier and the only evidence was “STOBAR carriers are tried and true” lol

    • @SyedSaifAbbasNaqvi
      @SyedSaifAbbasNaqvi Před rokem

      That's because China bullies its neighbours. If China wants to counter the US, it needs to have a stable and friendly relationship with its neighbours. When they stop bullying everyone, people's perception may change. Chinese people are nice but half the world hates their government.

    • @nagarajansree862
      @nagarajansree862 Před rokem

      what do you expect? CZcams is banned in China while it isnt banned in India, so of course Indian nationalists are more prevalent than chinese nationalists

    • @invictusforlife9116
      @invictusforlife9116 Před rokem +6

      It has a lot to do with CCP policies and actions.

  • @spilltea4241
    @spilltea4241 Před rokem +5

    Its the same stock footage of dusty old delhi from 2006
    Smh

  • @ram50228
    @ram50228 Před rokem +13

    Over all, what that change in India´s population means for EEUU?; it mean there is another country that will surpass EEUU´s Economy by 2028; EEUU will be the third power in the world by that year.

  • @MrPastaTube1
    @MrPastaTube1 Před rokem +67

    The declining fertitlity rate is a common symptome of the industrializing process and access to contraception. The one child policy was not a deciding factor in this, but definitely made it worse.

    • @zx4337
      @zx4337 Před rokem +17

      I as an one child policy product think it is great!!! For those people worries about labor force, I think many jobs will be replaced with robots in the near future.

    • @MrPastaTube1
      @MrPastaTube1 Před rokem +2

      @@zx4337 I doubt it.

    • @bhavikasicka7871
      @bhavikasicka7871 Před rokem

      As an Indian, I believe it's high time India implements stringent population control. We don't need to be breeding and growing this expanding labor pool for capitalists to exploit. We should be focusing on living well, eating well, developing creatively and technologically while sustainably, and protecting our habitats and homes. India looks dystopian.

    • @haruyanto8085
      @haruyanto8085 Před rokem +5

      ​@@MrPastaTube1 nah approx 30 million jobs will be replaced by AI in the near future

    • @user-wh9er8pe9n
      @user-wh9er8pe9n Před rokem +7

      @@MrPastaTube1 In fact, if the Chinese government did not implement the one-child policy at that time, it would not be able to support so many people under China's leisurely resources. According to relevant calculations, if China had liberalized childbearing, today's China would have 2.6 billion people, which is a terrible figure. No country can support so many people

  • @memeson6684
    @memeson6684 Před rokem +4

    "I like how India does have Hundreds of urban metropolitan cities and skyscrapers but still they manage to find out those old footages of slums and overcrowded areas" lol
    Like seriously, If you can't find those pictures just ask me, I will give you video's of my neighborhood and workplace at free of cost. Then just watch it with both of your healthy eyes and keep it in your mind until you die that India's infrastructure has grown alot over the past decade....

  • @youtoobization
    @youtoobization Před rokem +21

    So India should invest heavily in infrastructure so that companies would relocate manufacturing there creating a lot of jobs. I guess in the next few decades "made in India" will be a thing.

    • @tamobiswas6083
      @tamobiswas6083 Před rokem +11

      The biggest political push is made in india only. Also in recent budget the capital expenditure increased to 2.5% ( the highest in 75 years ). And is projected to increase as a percentage of budget. We are seeing everyday buildings being constructed. Roads being enlarged. New railway tracks. New airports being inaugurated. The push is much high.

  • @stanleyzac1648
    @stanleyzac1648 Před rokem +581

    Whether the market is bullish or bearish, I don't care. Trading worked well for me because I was able to raise over 6 figures when I started with 4 figures in only a few months by putting Rodger Michael Karl's advice into practice. Instead of trying to time the market by getting in and out every couple of weeks, trade a little portion of your portfolio.

    • @tomaszcz_k
      @tomaszcz_k Před rokem

      It's always a pleasure to hear your considerate and reasoned critique. Whether the market is bullish or bearish, I don't care. Trading worked well for me because I was able to raise over 6 figures when I started with 4 figures in only a few months by putting Rodger Michael Karl's advice into practice. Instead of trying to time the market by getting in and out every couple of weeks, trade a little portion of your portfolio.

    • @WiolciaMrozowska531
      @WiolciaMrozowska531 Před rokem

      Thank you so much for the advice. Your coach was simple to discover online. I did my research on him before I scheduled our phone call. He appears knowledgeable based on his online resume.

    • @AnnaFed015
      @AnnaFed015 Před rokem

      I invest with Rodger Michael Karl. He's the best when it comes to making high profits in the financial market, he's well accredited and proficient to help you through managing your investments...

    • @Windarti30
      @Windarti30 Před rokem

      When you have a good tutor, your portfolio will grow significantly. Rodger Michael Karl has always been that FA with good accessibility and in-depth knowledge of the financial industry sectors.

    • @Superpooper-2020
      @Superpooper-2020 Před rokem

      90% 0f us Inddians 0nly make a d0llar a day

  • @subhamsingh2284
    @subhamsingh2284 Před rokem +10

    The reporter sounds sad while narrating the story

    • @Sushil2k4
      @Sushil2k4 Před rokem +3

      Or maybe tired

    • @HoZk-qy5iv
      @HoZk-qy5iv Před rokem

      Or maybe she is tired that everytime indjan and American media force chinese to compare. even I would feel tired and irritated when people keep forcing me to talk about same topic again and again lol .

  • @edwin1041
    @edwin1041 Před rokem +32

    India has quality population. They are young and ready. A peaceful population with enough to eat and survive, educated enough to drive the world and progressing well, and the population will taper by year 2100 to 800 million from current 1400 million. Nothing to worry about INDIA. A democracy and not thrusting outward and believing in assimilation than confrontation, secular and multilingual and multi ethnic etc.

    • @mausam760
      @mausam760 Před rokem +4

      except for the jobs lol

    • @programmingwithsunny6121
      @programmingwithsunny6121 Před rokem +1

      ​@@mausam760maybe next time study properly?

    • @edwin1041
      @edwin1041 Před rokem

      @@mausam760 In some states like Kerala not even have enough kids in schools, the school I studied had around 1500 kids in the 1970s, now stands at total of 50 kids in eight levels. Many houses are even empty. Not many people for work too.

  • @bharathms5560
    @bharathms5560 Před rokem +5

    Use the correct map in the thumbnail 🤬

  • @dunny2210
    @dunny2210 Před rokem +5

    Wow even Mao said that Women are equal Men. Some countries still sadly disagree. Well China had an Empress in its Tang Dynasty.

  • @haarisahmed
    @haarisahmed Před rokem +26

    With fast evolving AI, ML, robotics and automation, do WSJ really believe that in 2070, countries would still need young population to manufacture products ?

    • @gamer-ff6mh
      @gamer-ff6mh Před rokem

      It's possible because people are basically used as captive markets. Like sheep. You are right that the meaningless jobs will be very high. But the government will find some way of employing. Be it in the army or police or vigilante s etc

    • @ArmageddonIsHere
      @ArmageddonIsHere Před rokem +7

      Countries will definitely need young people to *CONSUME* products, regardless of who or what makes them.
      Massive production will be useless without an equally large consumer base. And consumer bases are what large successful economies are built upon.

    • @haarisahmed
      @haarisahmed Před rokem +1

      @@ArmageddonIsHere Yeah but whole focus of the video is on manufacturing skipping consumption

    • @TJSaw
      @TJSaw Před 10 měsíci

      If you think robots are going to solve everything, you’re mistaken. Real life is not a Hollywood movie.

    • @haarisahmed
      @haarisahmed Před 10 měsíci

      @@TJSawHistory is evident that every technological revolution is opposed by such logic.

  • @Sunshine-jk9xd
    @Sunshine-jk9xd Před rokem +17

    Yellow shade on Indian footage and crowded areas always western channels have this footage of India !

    • @Deb_deCoder
      @Deb_deCoder Před rokem +3

      we must show them how really india and Indians are

  • @davidmoss2576
    @davidmoss2576 Před 10 měsíci +4

    The US love to focus on issues China will have in the future, instead of real problem going on in the US today.

  • @feinw2514
    @feinw2514 Před rokem +10

    If the number of population is the key, then Africa would have been the number one in the world

    • @worldnews9412
      @worldnews9412 Před rokem

      But if u don't have resources.

    • @7_years_and_
      @7_years_and_ Před rokem

      @@worldnews9412 india have resources 😁

    • @7_years_and_
      @7_years_and_ Před rokem

      @@aryanchoudhury6527 lol .India's worst - poorest states have the highest Fertility rate they live on other states tax revenue and economy since day one

    • @AmazTech
      @AmazTech Před rokem

      @@7_years_and_ that’s how a joint family also works.
      IN can’t be broken - developed states & undeveloped states wise.
      So the next best option, involuntarily supporting them to grow.
      it’s g0v’s task to find solution for this - pol’parties are unwilling to do this to safeguard their business.

    • @7_years_and_
      @7_years_and_ Před rokem

      @@AmazTech Its negative for a developing nation . where corrrupt states eating away nation's GDP without improving itself . Even in joint family , family support a person only up to a certain age not 75 years and beyond .

  • @jjsamuelgunn1136
    @jjsamuelgunn1136 Před rokem +19

    It's not like India's population increase happened overnight. Yes, it's a milestone. But if an increased population had any economic impact, we would have seen its clear effects over the past decade or so in tandem with their population increase. If you have been following the news, they pointed out that AI would replace many jobs in China. Having a larger population would actually worsen the employment situation. Considering the exponential development of tech like AI, countries should be decreasing their population right now, not increasing. It's about timing. India got their timing wrong.

    • @afdcg
      @afdcg Před rokem +3

      AI and automation can actually ruin a country. Technological advancements were good in the past as it made it more effective in certain fields. But now people will only loose jobs. People will not go for kids in such situations.
      In the end a countries progress depends upon the government and tax payers. If there aren't many Tax payers then a country can't grow or do well.

    • @mirrorocean3852
      @mirrorocean3852 Před rokem

      @@afdcg AI will work and pay taxes for humans. We don’t want more people.

  • @sumedhpradhan
    @sumedhpradhan Před rokem +1

    show crowded streets while showing india... nicee

  • @reardelt
    @reardelt Před rokem +5

    China still has hundreds of mililons of people in the small villages who are not yet employed in factories. So if the population falls, that will not reduce the labour force.

    • @yoloswag1357
      @yoloswag1357 Před 10 měsíci +1

      that makes no sense. the population pyramid takes those 'small villages' into account as well. Its talking about how the country overall is aging, including those small villages.

  • @thebeautifulanimal
    @thebeautifulanimal Před rokem +4

    India needs to upskill it's young population and invest heavily on development of ecosystem so it can provide adequate jobs to it's young population.... I am really optimistic and hope for the best❤

  • @Risingworldd
    @Risingworldd Před rokem +20

    I love the way how western Media show China financial capital Shanghaito represent Thier country and India oldest city of Banaras to represent my country Hahaha😂😂 this is how they do propaganda against any developing country😂😂😂

    • @KrishnaKumar-hz8my
      @KrishnaKumar-hz8my Před rokem +1

      Emotional damage control bro😂😂

    • @silvershroud6263
      @silvershroud6263 Před rokem +2

      That's typical. Western media also show footage from Bangladesh overcrowded trains to show world that indian trains are like that.
      Western media will always show india like this even after india becomes 3rd largest economy in few years.

  • @hindurashtra63
    @hindurashtra63 Před rokem +37

    I'm from India. I don't know anybody who has more than 3 Kids. Normal is 1 - 2. Abnormal is 3. Its the common these days, Gone are days of people having more than 3 Kids, It might have been true in the older generation, Not today.

    • @markchan8110
      @markchan8110 Před rokem +18

      Probably not the middle class people. There are a tendency that the poor and lower income people tend to have more kids.

    • @AshishSingh-ut6fk
      @AshishSingh-ut6fk Před rokem

      From which state?

    • @gamer-ff6mh
      @gamer-ff6mh Před rokem +3

      Lol. What can you expect from a Hindu Rashtra supporter. Totally unaware of reality.

    • @AmazTech
      @AmazTech Před rokem +2

      Reason for poor/lower tend to have more than 2 is the thought of
      more hands = higher the chances of family coming out of poverty
      Mortality Rate (malnutrition) among poor is also an another reason.
      only g0v’s can address this issue - can’t blame the poor.

    • @dep3031
      @dep3031 Před rokem +8

      ​@@gamer-ff6mh typical of any side of biased supporters of anything.
      You cannot generalise people

  • @vinitvsankhe
    @vinitvsankhe Před rokem +6

    As standard of living improves fertility decreases. When India sees that population living quality it will improve it will see a decline too.

  • @yashvendrapratapsingh6122

    That’s the wrong Indian map . Colonist

  • @craigkdillon
    @craigkdillon Před rokem +43

    India's government has a traditional policy of resisting and restricting foreign investment.
    They see foreign investment as a threat.
    I have read that this has decreased. I wonder how much, and if it is enough.

    • @surojeetchatterji9966
      @surojeetchatterji9966 Před rokem

      Those r propagandas u have read for political reasons from this same media group. American & Europeans invest where their political & geopolitical interests r. It has nothing to do with any countries policy.

    • @harshray6389
      @harshray6389 Před rokem +23

      I agree that was the case before but now fdi of India is increasing rapidly every year😊

    • @silverprad
      @silverprad Před rokem +7

      India's equites was the second best performed stocks in 2022 with FII (foreign investment institutes) holding 20% of them. Make in India policy is actually the opposite of restricting, it's an invitation to investors. The restriction policies, i think, are primarily there to prevent monopoly of foreign investors which destroys local businesses.

    • @whentheimposterissus8376
      @whentheimposterissus8376 Před rokem +23

      You can't blame us. Last time we allowed a Company, it costed us *"45 trillion Pounds being looted from us"* , 250 years of Colonisation , Intense Racism and Partition in 1947.

    • @prashantjha5629
      @prashantjha5629 Před rokem +2

      We are open to foreign investment in most industries

  • @thupilisaikumarreddy
    @thupilisaikumarreddy Před rokem

    Thumbnail photo is wrong, kindly Correct it with right Map.

  • @cowholy3031
    @cowholy3031 Před rokem +41

    Just because India has a similar population to China, it is not inevitable that India will be as successful as China.
    Except in population, the two countries do not have much in common, either in culture & history or physical geography.
    China will be China and India will be India.

    • @hitulsavani
      @hitulsavani Před rokem +8

      and here in India Cow is Holy :)

    • @hottube6254
      @hottube6254 Před rokem +13

      @@hitulsavani and in china pork is tasty

    • @narayansingh9407
      @narayansingh9407 Před rokem +4

      Let's just hope that we humans will be able to eradicate poverty in any part of the world soon, and unite together to not fight for land etc. And will be advancing in becoming borderless world

    • @hitulsavani
      @hitulsavani Před rokem

      @@hottube6254 you assumed that i am indian/paki muslim so you wrote that comment! Lol uneducated fella when will you grow people ? Lodu me Gujarati hindu hu , sale likh ne ke liye internet mil gaya to kahi per bhi hag denga ? … sarcasm suna hy kabhi lodu

    • @varun2250
      @varun2250 Před rokem +15

      ​@@hitulsavani In CCP rule, Uyghurs are holy.

  • @taquilatricepss
    @taquilatricepss Před rokem +24

    i am so done with media just selecting random street in some indian village to depict the entire country 😂

    • @604h22a
      @604h22a Před rokem +14

      Believe it or not most Indian cities are such

    • @good-tn9sr
      @good-tn9sr Před rokem +3

      @@604h22a what??? You have no idea, this is like taking clips of downtown philadelphia with its rundown apartment complexes with duct taped windows

    • @pavanbarhate6765
      @pavanbarhate6765 Před rokem +5

      ​@@604h22a bruh, I live in Village in India and it's 1000 times better than this☠️

  • @stevenzheng5459
    @stevenzheng5459 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Is 1.7 billion people even sustainable for India? I think China's current population of around 1.4 billion is already overpopulated, and China has greater landmass.

  • @harendrasinghrathore2206

    Mosy important guys wsj show our incorrect map which is not acceptable to any Indian they show whole ladakh as China's part . Please correct it

  • @jessetorres8738
    @jessetorres8738 Před rokem +9

    Trivia note: The U.S. game show The Amazing Race has been on for 34 Seasons, they have traveled to India for 12 of them (1, 4, 6, 7, 10, 12, 13, 14, 18, 20, 27, & 32), & they have traveled to China for 9 of them (1, 6, 10, 14, 16, 18, 21, 24, & 28).

    • @karanvarma4843
      @karanvarma4843 Před rokem +1

      Thank you US game show for visiting India more than China. I will buy Two McDonald's burger so that I can support the American Crime Syndicate.

  • @navajyotichetia8968
    @navajyotichetia8968 Před rokem +5

    Unfortunately peaking didn't happen in Peking, the nightmare for population growth happens when there is ageless reproduction- even if it results in the production of mad and crazy babies

  • @balamurugandurairaj6023
    @balamurugandurairaj6023 Před rokem +1

    Everyone thinking only how people Live in India, but many forget to think about Indian who lives around the world, rule country, lead many big corporations

  • @AMANDEEP-xc7jo
    @AMANDEEP-xc7jo Před rokem +2

    Lancet study of 2019 said India will peak at 1.6 billion in 2048. UN is still being conservative here. New experts don't even believe 2048 as the peak. I will be surprised even if the peak moves in 2040s.

  • @bhadanisandip
    @bhadanisandip Před rokem +12

    In all of this discussion people miss one most important thing to mention ... "the immigration" China may loosen up its policy for immigration. Same way there will be gigantic number of people who will leave India for other countries. I mean this is happening right now, lot of people are leaving India for wester nations where population is plummeting already.

    • @achillesarmstrong9639
      @achillesarmstrong9639 Před rokem +1

      And all the talented India immigrate out. Maybe that is also the problem.

    • @yashvaibhav4207
      @yashvaibhav4207 Před rokem +1

      @@achillesarmstrong9639 dude many talented folks are coming back also , life in the west maybe a luxury one but the culture there is hostile , I mean indians are working there for some dollars , they have started coming back to start businesses here.

    • @MrPeaceGuy54
      @MrPeaceGuy54 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@yashvaibhav4207I think that "hostile" would be an exaggeration. There are numerous Indians who are present in Western nations as employees and students who do not face any issues that would be worse than the problems you would face in India. Sure, there are some serious flaws, but we can say the same about our own country (which is what convinces people to leave in the first place).

  • @jerolvilladolid
    @jerolvilladolid Před rokem +25

    Not to mention that modern pakistan and bangladesh are parts of historical India. And both of these countries are also among the largest population countries in the world. At its peak this century, india, pakistan, and bangladesh could host 1/3 of the earth's population. Thats incredible!

    • @legend9646
      @legend9646 Před rokem +8

      Pakistan's Punjab, India's Punjab and UP-Bihar-Bengal(North India except the himalayan states)and Bangladesh have very fertile soil and can feee its population easily
      They have had a large population since the beginning controlling 1/4th of world economy before British arrvived

    • @legend9646
      @legend9646 Před rokem +1

      @@RafaySarmad Maurya empire ka naam suna hai? Gupta empire la naam suna hai? Most of India, paki.punjab and sindh were under them
      Even marathas ruled from 1674-1818 over subcontinent😂chutiya

  • @user-kk8hq4dm8k
    @user-kk8hq4dm8k Před rokem +2

    Go India!!!!!

  • @lexluther-1169
    @lexluther-1169 Před rokem

    It means expect more calls from Microsoft's Refund Department.

  • @shashikantgaikwad7216
    @shashikantgaikwad7216 Před rokem +7

    India is in a growth trajectory for next 15 years, demographics will help with more consumer spending 500 % more from now especially education and gadgets like mobile phones, tablets or whichever is relevant 5G, 6G etc

  • @sivtech
    @sivtech Před rokem +4

    We have many new tech and abundant food by 2030 so no problem for both nations

    • @traceler
      @traceler Před rokem +1

      we have more clean air, water and the oceans more fish and wildlife and trees in the world with every increase in world population.

    • @TomNook.
      @TomNook. Před rokem +1

      its going to be the opposite.

    • @sivtech
      @sivtech Před rokem +1

      @@TomNook. nope lol. Stop doomering and look at how solor panel prices have fallen. With near free electricity everything change. That's just solor panel. AI will change 10x more than that

  • @adutiyajha6736
    @adutiyajha6736 Před rokem +1

    I want to work at wall Street journal
    What are the required qualifications should I have

  • @Amorphous_Bb
    @Amorphous_Bb Před rokem +2

    That clip is like a couple decades old and prolly from a random street market in delhi
    Y'all still use it??! Grow up

  • @douglaswong8610
    @douglaswong8610 Před rokem +3

    Have a reality check
    Focus on the number
    Losing the humanity
    In the 2022 Global Hunger Index, India ranks 107th out of the 121 countries with sufficient data to calculate 2022 GHI scores. With a score of 29.1, India has a level of hunger that is serious.

  • @41ankitt
    @41ankitt Před rokem +2

    Now that India has the world's most populated country title we need to start focusing on so many things .... We need at least a growth rate of 8 to 9 percent per annum , build infrastructure like the way China did in the 90's and the 2000's also at the same time keep bridging the rich poor gap all these problems are tough .... But I do think India is ready for the challenge we are a vibrant democracy where we are dedicated towards finding new and creative solutions to all our problems unlike China .... So I am very confident of India's future and that if we keep on working hard and innovative we are definitely a force to recon with in the future .... Right now we are very well on the path of becoming one .... 🙂 ....

    • @AmazTech
      @AmazTech Před rokem +1

      with this pol1t1cal atmosphere - gdp & global voice may improve.
      but per capita & standard of living wise - i don’t see much of an improvement.
      i am not sure on what basis you phrased your prediction
      - as g0v is spending on unnecessary, ignoring necessary nation building exercises.

  • @AR-bh3mn
    @AR-bh3mn Před rokem

    Congratulations to India! 🇮🇳 🎉👏😁

  • @fitchkou
    @fitchkou Před rokem +1

    Pretty decent coverage, even though its from WSJ.

  • @diuleisin
    @diuleisin Před rokem +26

    Once AI starts to replace human workers, the young unemployed population will be a disaster

    • @tamobiswas6083
      @tamobiswas6083 Před rokem +18

      And who will create and maintain the AI? Well people 😂

    • @series1054
      @series1054 Před rokem +1

      Nah labour is always cheap.

    • @manthanpatil6410
      @manthanpatil6410 Před rokem +1

      and at this pace its going to be way sooner for governments to do anything about it

    • @bhuvaneshs.k638
      @bhuvaneshs.k638 Před rokem

      It's not just ai
      It's addictive manufacturing

    • @bhuvaneshs.k638
      @bhuvaneshs.k638 Před rokem +5

      ​@@tamobiswas6083 it'll be Americans and Chinese... Definitely not much in india

  • @sidn515
    @sidn515 Před rokem +6

    India's cultural norms are what prevented it from being in the same boat as china right now

    • @hirenahir76200
      @hirenahir76200 Před rokem

      Lol no it's not the culture it's worse education system they are just degree generating machines and also not having quality companies

  • @nmew6926
    @nmew6926 Před rokem +1

    Demographic dividend
    Ai revolution: Hold my beer

  • @rockystyle8626
    @rockystyle8626 Před rokem +1

    That's good 😊

  • @aran145
    @aran145 Před rokem +87

    The way WSG displays India and purposefully choosing stereotypical videos and pictures compared to the Chinese ones feels so weird

    • @Deb_deCoder
      @Deb_deCoder Před rokem +1

      wsj is built and run by hippocreates

    • @eJohndoe
      @eJohndoe Před rokem +25

      But the stereotypical clips do portray the ground reality of both countries

    • @aran145
      @aran145 Před rokem +1

      @@eJohndoei don't deny it but could've taken better pics. For example - They chose a crowded market as if that doesn't exist in China but i didnt see any of that in this vid tho
      I mean they literally showed pics of a car expo, people outside Louis Vuitton and people working in factory while showing China
      But all good we move i guess. These western news outlets will continue to get clowned on even more in the future

    • @shashankvaya2636
      @shashankvaya2636 Před rokem +7

      I WAS JUST THINKING THAT..... Don't worry. In the coming decades, they won't be able to ignore us

    • @neverletmego6414
      @neverletmego6414 Před rokem +13

      maybe China being 5 times richer than India per person has something to do with it, just saying

  • @rfang5380
    @rfang5380 Před rokem +5

    印度是亚洲最强大的国家,中国要向印度学习强国的经验

    • @juzzz.
      @juzzz. Před rokem +2

      It should be vice-versa too. Indians like Chinese people.
      Let's hope both the g0v's work amicably & solve it's differences.

    • @ArghyadeepPal
      @ArghyadeepPal Před rokem +3

      你怎么能说按照总加速师的说法,中国人可以轻松扛起“二百斤麦子十里山路不换肩"?这绝对意味着所有中国人都是天生的超人。

    • @rfang5380
      @rfang5380 Před rokem

      @@ArghyadeepPal 我们再强大也会跟你们虚心学习的

  • @puneetmaheshwari
    @puneetmaheshwari Před rokem

    this is soo true gov is not focusing on jobs instead trying to cancel each other

  • @Amal-ow7in
    @Amal-ow7in Před rokem

    India 🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳

  • @traceler
    @traceler Před rokem +6

    Is the air and water in India still clean and pure regardless the increase in population and burning of natural resources?

    • @amritaparida3992
      @amritaparida3992 Před rokem +2

      Yes, it is! But, depends on which part of India you are.

    • @srikrishnak196
      @srikrishnak196 Před rokem +1

      ​@Tyt Xlx Speaking for the cow belt ?

    • @pranavgandhar4604
      @pranavgandhar4604 Před rokem

      India had 1.4 billion population , we would deliver climate change on ground by EV revolution than west barks at Un

    • @pc-hyperzone526
      @pc-hyperzone526 Před rokem

      Oo western who is taking about natural resources 😂 don't worry about India worry about Russian

  • @deepeshbajpai8543
    @deepeshbajpai8543 Před rokem +6

    Proud to be Indian🇮🇳

  • @ygt-cd3mg
    @ygt-cd3mg Před rokem

    This model is wrong, this is assuming china doing the labor intensive industries forever, but economic growth means industrial transition as well, it happened to every major economy.

  • @CARS63
    @CARS63 Před rokem

    Thank you

  • @IKNFLY666
    @IKNFLY666 Před rokem +11

    a small valuable population is better than a large expendable population.

  • @tanny786
    @tanny786 Před rokem +2

    FREEDOM FOR ARANACHUL PRADESH FROM INDIAN OCCUPATION

  • @AnandKumar-rg3bm
    @AnandKumar-rg3bm Před rokem

    India may not be super develop in future soon but it is going to become more relevant and most important global south axis

  • @megamind6000
    @megamind6000 Před rokem

    India is very important to us and eu and Africa

  • @windsong3wong828
    @windsong3wong828 Před rokem +4

    No difference as the poorer countries tend to have tremendous population growth.
    Tremendous population growth equals low per capita income as the government lacked the resources to educate them.
    Most countries don’t have sufficient resources to educate them or create a vibrant economy that provides jobs for them.

    • @fuzzywuzzy0549
      @fuzzywuzzy0549 Před rokem

      why don't you start a youtube channel and upload clips of your high rise buildings? after all you have more people than entire Europe and North America combined. lol

  • @chongmingwang4247
    @chongmingwang4247 Před rokem +4

    Congrats india. It is your time to shine

  • @rollbin
    @rollbin Před rokem +1

    What about the education level of the demography,

  • @TheHariniravi
    @TheHariniravi Před rokem

    Map of india shown in thumbnail is incorrect

  • @lionelwong5842
    @lionelwong5842 Před rokem +3

    Large population = big economy ?
    This is really stupid reasoning.
    Both China and India have big populations through out the 20th century and yet they lagged far behind Japan and western countries.
    It's only when China started to open up the country and reform its economy from 1978, then China's economy started to rise. It continued to rise until China became the second largest economy in the world overtaking Japan and other western countries.
    Therefore big population does not magically transform India into a developed country.

    • @lionelwong5842
      @lionelwong5842 Před rokem

      @Joy
      That's a wrong assumption that per capita income GDP will increase with increasing population.
      E. g
      The population of 1 million people with per capita income GDP of US $2,000
      When the population quickly increased to 2 million, the per capita income GDP does not remain the same, it's going to go down by 1/2 to US $ 1,000 if there's little economic growth.
      Furthermore, more babies born does not immediately translate into greater work force. You have to wait until 20 years later that these newly born to grow up and become productive members of the country.
      E. g a family man earns US $2,000 yearly. When his wife gives birth to 10 children, it doesn't mean that his family is becoming richer, that his his yearly income will increase 10X to US $20,000 with 10 children. Big family of 10 children is a huge burden to the man with small income. He may not be able to give sufficient food and educational to his 10 children.
      With more mouth to feed he may not be able to afford to pay for decent housing or a vehicle for himself.
      He'll have to wait at least 20 years for some of his children to grow up and to work. And with poor education backgrounds and poor living conditions, likely these children will repeat the same cycle of living in poverty with few improvements in life.
      If you Indians still believe in having more babies will magically transform India into a big economy, then go ahead and do it.

    • @lionelwong5842
      @lionelwong5842 Před rokem +1

      @Joy
      No, not immediately.
      You have to feed the babies for them to grow up and give them education.
      If too many babies are born, I'm afraid low income families can't afford to feed them, let alone give them education.
      It takes about 20 years from babyhood to adulthood for them to be able to get into the work force.
      I'm afraid you can't see the reality but blinded by false assumptions about increasing population = to increased prosperity.
      That's a stupid reasoning.

  • @sayanmandal1289
    @sayanmandal1289 Před rokem +13

    West people and media are talking about India let me tell you something do you have any idea how Indians are running your country. India is largest tractor maker, spices, milk , 2 wheeler,fruit etc and 2nd largest in mobile making, internet users, textile, stil , 3rd largest car producers electricity, Renewal engry and so many things that I can't remember now and don't forget history the number, button, shampoo, youga , navigation system, point , yoga , thorium base energy, ruler , usb, flush toilet , sewage system etc..

    • @TomNook.
      @TomNook. Před rokem

      China is the leading thorium based energy and USB production. As for the rest.... flush toilets? sewage system? How deluded can you get.

    • @richinmathew9178
      @richinmathew9178 Před rokem +2

      Just being curious
      Did you Google it (no offence 🙏🙏)

    • @antoeckhart
      @antoeckhart Před rokem

      drop the flask

    • @superjit6190
      @superjit6190 Před rokem

      India HDI index is 132 , UN SDG rank 120 , per capita income is 2100$ compared to china 12000$ ...india lacks basic sanitation and hygiene

    • @someone-og5ni
      @someone-og5ni Před rokem

      ​@@superjit6190 the fact that u r using 5g is also invented by indian , so keep ur mouth shut, and if u have little sense go serach in Google !

  • @nikitagavrilovru
    @nikitagavrilovru Před rokem

    Good job!

  • @tpb1006
    @tpb1006 Před rokem +1

    All I can see is a Very rich 10percent India and a very poor 90percent.

  • @fengross5554
    @fengross5554 Před rokem +1

    India number one forever 🎉

  • @containedhurricane
    @containedhurricane Před rokem +9

    It means hundreds of millions of cheap labors will be available for developed countries

    • @someone-og5ni
      @someone-og5ni Před rokem

      There will be no more presence of developed countries , india china will dominate everywhere ,

    • @PAPA.PARDESI
      @PAPA.PARDESI Před rokem +2

      also PM or president for ur country like UK😂😂😂😂

    • @kabirkhan9901
      @kabirkhan9901 Před 11 měsíci

      @@PAPA.PARDESI thats the strategy these folks are not getting we will subtly get in their system built by their forefather when they are fighting with china and whatnot as we indian dont like to put all our eggs in one basket

  • @spider6660
    @spider6660 Před rokem +2

    So the shrinking and ageing population in Japan, Korea, Italy, Taiwan, France are due to one child policy?

    • @ucchau173
      @ucchau173 Před 11 měsíci +1

      France population not thrinking...they birthrate is 1.8 and have many imigrant 😂😂😂

    • @spider6660
      @spider6660 Před 11 měsíci

      @@ucchau173 That's contributed by immigrants.

  • @laycm6248
    @laycm6248 Před rokem +2

    😂 meaningless to compare population with Economic. It's all comes to managing

  • @SnChem
    @SnChem Před rokem

    I feel like the model has not factor how bad global warming is gonna get by 2050 lol

  • @ddg1393
    @ddg1393 Před rokem +63

    1. This video just showed the differences between India and China from 1960s to current dates
    2. This did not provide any in depth analysis regarding the 'profound effect' of India being the most populous country on the global economy.
    3. Use the correct map of India
    4. When showing India's population, there are a good number of metropolitans with great levels of urbanization and infrastructure. So WSJ, you might want to portray India's case in a brighter light.

    • @YiLunMusk
      @YiLunMusk Před rokem

      It's always the West creating a 'Vs culture'. They hate someone overtaking them.

    • @sreetansai
      @sreetansai Před rokem +20

      using overpopulated streets to portray india is always a thing in western videos, they never change.

    • @rajudas2302
      @rajudas2302 Před rokem

      True

    • @ddg1393
      @ddg1393 Před rokem +1

      @@sreetansai pity their ignorance. Reminds me of Dodo.

    • @alexanderphilip1809
      @alexanderphilip1809 Před rokem +13

      @@sreetansai Are you suggesting India is not overpopulated ? The population in China the largest is far more dispersed than it is in India. The city western media portrays as being "populated" is not even located in the most populated state. So before whining about unfairness measure up to the claims you make. This pathetic compulsion that forces Indians to lash out at the first instance of our shortcomings being aired (which are real) is most revealing of our pathetic post colonial insecurity. Defend the country when there is a reason to when it's genuinely under threat or misrepresentation not when a mirror is held up to your national image.

  • @dhawal7476
    @dhawal7476 Před rokem +20

    You can certainly do a better job at picking shots which are currently full of stereotypical things. There is a crazy diversity and every extreme in India but WSJ seems to be showing only one extreme.

    • @silvershroud6263
      @silvershroud6263 Před rokem

      Every Western media does that now. There's a reason china maintains strict control on media in their country

  • @iAMcGd
    @iAMcGd Před rokem +2

    Thumbnail Pe India ka proper MAP use karo
    And ye konse India ki report dikha rahe h ye log ?

  • @sajeeshopto3045
    @sajeeshopto3045 Před rokem +1

    When peaples get good education birthrate gradually decrease..

  • @revaddict
    @revaddict Před rokem +18

    It will be interesting to see what a 2050 world will look like.. China, India and the US will be the 3 largest economies.. China will most likely be at odds with US and India.. Yuan and Rupee trade will increase significantly, meanwhile dollar trade will decrease percentage wise.. The demographics of each nation will be vastly different from the other..

    • @Superpooper-2020
      @Superpooper-2020 Před rokem +1

      My inddia will always remain a 3rd w0rld c0untrry

    • @anonymousman2521
      @anonymousman2521 Před rokem

      India will never have a bigger economy then USA, China will surpass US for some time but will eventually fall behind.

    • @rcbrascan
      @rcbrascan Před rokem +2

      What the video doesn't show is the US Population pyramid which is very similar to China's.

    • @kapil4417037
      @kapil4417037 Před rokem

      did bageshwor dham baba told you this?

    • @frankiehuang2266
      @frankiehuang2266 Před rokem +1

      not really, China is currently facing the biggest economy crises in past 50 years.

  • @ayushbhatt-fj4lg
    @ayushbhatt-fj4lg Před rokem +5

    Love from 🇮🇳❤️🇺🇸

  • @Xinnie_The_Flu
    @Xinnie_The_Flu Před rokem +1

    Foreign cameraman comes to India.
    Taxi driver: which city do you want to go to sir?
    Cameraman: Either take me to the dirtiest village you know of in India or the most overcrowded place you can find.
    😂

    • @fuzzywuzzy0549
      @fuzzywuzzy0549 Před rokem

      that's what fascinates the western tourists. why would someone from Europe, North America or Australia go to India to see fancy buildings and restaurants? xD

  • @shzarmai
    @shzarmai Před rokem +2

    Hopefully India can become a High-Income Advanced Economy soon :-))