Section 588 Post-War Glimpse of India

Let's take a look at what happened in post-war South Asia through an editorial in the Observer newspaper in New Delhi, the capital of the Republic of Delhi, on the 35th day of the first century. Pen, fun, and www.biquge.info

"We can see the China Information Industry Park in Hyderabad and Mumbai, and here and the surrounding cities and villages are almost two completely different worlds, on one side are the old ox carts, the sweaty black peasants and their naked children, and on the other hand, the latest Chinese-made cars are speeding down the highway in the park, and the Chinese people sitting in them may have the same skin color as the farmers, but they don't sweat because the air conditioning in the park is everywhere. If they leave the 300 or 500 square kilometre country within a country, they may carry a Chinese seagull camera and shake their heads and sigh at the stench of the environment like other Chinese tourists, while photographing the people around them, so that they can go back and show their friends and family a dirty and real Indian peninsula, so that they will always realize how lucky they are to be out of the sea of suffering, and if possible, they hope that their descendants can also live in this enclave and become the next generation of Indian Chinese. Yes, theoretically they are still Indians, but they try their best to erase the imprint of India in their hearts and in every detail of their lives, and if one day they can lie in the morgue in a Chinese hospital, instead of being cremated by flowers on the banks of the Ganges, then they will consider their life to be complete.

Maybe every parent inside and outside the park will say to their children, "Look, study science and Chinese well, and then you will become one of them, maybe as parents, we are fortunate to be allowed to enter the park because our children work in the park, enter this paradise on earth, even if it is only for one day, we will feel extremely happy." "At a time when the difference between inside and outside the park is as obvious as heaven and hell, we can only say that the future of the Indian peninsula is dying, and his essence has been sucked away by two sucking veins inserted in this sacred land. When everyone's joy and anger are restrained by whether or not they are on the list, no one can stop all this, and neither can God.

At present, several states in the Indian peninsula have a very developed IT industry. Who is not aware of this among the "earthlings"? If someone says that India's IT industry is "deformed", it may attract a lot of ridicule. Because India's IT education and IT industry are very developed, developed IT education has promoted the rapid development of the IT industry, which has almost become "common sense".

However, who knew that by the beginning of the 30th century, the finance office of the Audria University of the Republic of Hyderabad did not have a single computer - the financial statements were piled up from the floor to the roof, and half of the house was piled up with ledgers. The university's Department of International Politics has only a 386 computer and is often not working. It often takes an hour or two to send an e-mail, and the typewriters use typewriters that are similar to those used during the Industrial Revolution in England are loud to work: the whole administrative building is like that!

This is not alarmist or a smear against the Indian IT industry. The use of IT products at Audria University in Hyderabad, India, is actually a microcosm of the size of the IT market in the entire Indian peninsula. In other words, the IT industry of the Indian Peninsula countries is disconnected from the IT market of the Indian Peninsula countries.

Since the beginning of the last decade, India's high-tech industry, led by information technology, has developed rapidly. In the first three decades, the output value of India's information technology industry was less than 1.73 billion rupees, and by 1960-1961 it had soared to 97 billion rupees. However, if we take a closer look at the structure of India's IT industry, we will find that it is a deformed industry that is overly dependent on overseas markets.

According to Singh, the rapid development of the IT industry in Peninsular India is not driven by the Indian national economy itself, but by the international demand, especially by the economic needs of the capital-centric countries (China and the Chinese Community). The demand for IT products in the Indian Peninsula by a group of developed countries led by China will not be of much help to improve the technology of India's IT industry, especially the progress of core technologies that are conducive to consolidating national security. The reason for this dependent development of the IT industry lies in the long-term shrinking national market of India, which has a population of about 80 percent of the poor population, which greatly limits the purchasing power of the domestic market for IT products and the conditions for the domestic cultivation and development of IT technology.

So what will be the result of this "export-oriented" IT industry structure?

On the one hand, the shrinking domestic consumer market has made the IT boom unrelated to the majority of Indian citizens. From the early post-war period to today, 10 years later, the number of computers per 1,000 people in the Indian peninsula has grown from 0.3 to 7.2, while in China it has grown from 0.4 to 37.2 computers over the same period. Without the support of domestic hardware consumption, it means that there can be no domestic market for software consumption. And without a domestic market, in layman's terms, ordinary people in India are unable to consume and enjoy the fruits of IT technology development.

On the other hand, over-reliance on foreign markets has led to the IT industry becoming a "tree without roots" and its foundation is unstable. Once the foreign consumer market shrinks and IT orders decrease, it will be a fatal blow to India's IT industry. And because there is no support from the domestic market, in the face of this blow, the entire industry will have to sit still, without the power to parry.

At the same time, IT education, which is linked to the IT industry, has become a "human resources" production organization that sends IT talent abroad rather than domestically. Zhang Wenmu pointed out that due to the limited industrial potential of the Indian national market to absorb talents, these two major departments have actually become new departments that provide talent "products" to overseas capital. In line with the rapid development of India's economy and the counter-circulation of outward profits, the rapid development of India's education and IT industries has also grown in tandem with the number of unemployed and lost talents.

According to the data, 63% of the output value of India's software industry comes from China's orders, which is highly dependent on China's economy. India's software is exported to 100 countries and regions, of which more than 60% is exported to China. There are nearly 3,000 software companies in India, employing more than 400,000 people, as many as 300,000 Chinese of Indian origin working in high-tech companies in China's Silicon Valley, 10% of the founders of Internet companies in Silicon Valley are Indian immigrants, and as many as 100,000 Indian software engineers working overseas. The reason for the rapid development of IT education in India and the flood of students applying for IT majors is not that there is a great demand for IT in India, but that the rapid growth of the IT industry in the capital center countries has affected the demand for Indian intellectuals to go abroad.

In other words, India's IT industry is actually the IT outsourcing business of developed countries such as China; And India's IT education has also transformed into an agency for the production of "human resources" in developed countries in India. If we look at India's IT education in the context of this embarrassing situation in the IT industry, we will not arbitrarily evaluate the "good" or "bad" of India's IT education.

Therefore, when learning from the development of IT education in Peninsular India, we must pay attention to identifying the economic environment in which its education is located when developing other industries. It is necessary to learn from the strengths of IT education in Peninsular India from the aspects of "attaching equal importance to elite education and vocational education", "establishing market-oriented vocational education values", and "promoting the internationalization of education", but it is still insufficient. The development of the IT industry in other developing countries must take the consequences of the shrinking national market in India as a lesson and develop IT education on the premise of narrowing the gap and expanding domestic demand. Otherwise, no matter how developed IT education is, it will be "making wedding clothes for others" under the model of "part-time economy". ”

In fact, under China's radiation, the development of the entire Chinese community is still relatively balanced, of course, this is also relative to the entire community, for example, Sanhan will not develop a large number of nuclear power plants, they can use Japan's nuclear power resources and their own rich hydropower resources, Japan does not need to develop steel heavy industry, at this point they can concentrate on the development of other industries.

"The heart of the Chinese empire is not dead". This sentence has been lingering in the ears of people in the Indian Peninsula for decades, and we have always had the impression that the Chinese will come to the Indian Peninsula and let the people here be slaves again, and then rule and enslave the Indian people, rob India's resources, and put the people of various countries in India in fire and water. If you look closely, you will find that there are so many loopholes in this that it is not logical at all.

Putting aside the previous story, when people draw another blueprint for China for the time being. The western part of China is fully bordered by Russia, so let's see whether it is Russian fertilizer or Indian fertilizer. Russia's territory is about 1.5 times the size of India, its underground crude oil reserves are second only to Saudi Arabia, and it is rich in various minerals that have not been explored in many places. On the ground, freshwater resources, forest resources, and wildlife resources are not an order of magnitude higher than those of India. Speaking of military strength and China, or even India is not an order of magnitude, the Chinese can occupy Russia only by sending light armored troops, so that the Russians are slaves of the country, and the language and culture are connected with northern Xinjiang, which is very convenient to manage. They don't even have the original *sub* bullet, and they can't even find a single chip to scare the Chinese; if the Americans occupy Canada, it will be more convenient, easy, and cheaper than going thousands of miles to occupy China. Then some people will say that Russia has a total population of 30 million, and who will enslave after it is accounted for? That's so simple, the Chinese only need to post a notice in India, which says: sincerely recruit workers to Russia, no visa, voluntarily go at their own expense, the salary is 3 yuan per hour (half of the minimum wage in China and other community countries), and paying half of the salary is enough to enslave others. But I dare to believe that the Indians who are willing to go to enslavement must have their heads squeezed, and you can see why this is the case if you look at how much migrant workers are getting into the city now, including those illegal immigrants who are smuggling, each of whom costs 170,000 rupees, and many of them have risked their lives to come to Russia and other European countries, only to find that it is no longer their paradise.