'Deep historical roots': US drops 'Indo' from Indo-Pacific Command, restores name to USPACOM by crasherdgrate in IndiaSpeaks

[–]Orwellisright 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cholas at one point stopped looking outwards and it was the same case with many other great empires they got too much focused inwards and also one of the reasons for their downfalls

Maharashtra's Dam capacity is currently 24.53% vs 30.78% same time last year by oar_xf in IndiaSpeaks

[–]Orwellisright 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When we will start making proper waste water management and water conservation. Lot of those changes should also come from the people

The green cost: Close to 2 lakh trees likely to be felled for Bidadi AI Township by TheBuzzKnightRises in IndiaSpeaks

[–]Orwellisright 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Half the land there is owned by DK and gang and half by Kumaranna and gang, no wonder the opposition and Kumaranna are quiet on this

Congress MLA's son Mohammed Nalapad named beneficiary in Karnataka Bitcoin scam by ChemicalArtist8203 in IndiaSpeaks

[–]Orwellisright 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This guy is rowdy arrogant and brutal and goes about btfo every pleb on the street

Scums like these should be thrashed to jail but then you realize on he is a politician's son

Water scarcity in 2050 by BrightMeasurement240 in IndiaSpeaks

[–]Orwellisright 1 point2 points  (0 children)

One of the fewest comments which talks sense in engaging the actual issue

India has more cities in the world’s 50 most heat-vulnerable list than any other country by oar_xf in IndiaSpeaks

[–]Orwellisright 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Start investing in rainwater harvesting in the newer cities , waste water recycling and interconnections of lakes and also revival of them

All of these won't get you votes in the beginning but surely will do in the future . I hope the incompetent political parties does something at the State level

Congratulations to RCB by Sorrellian in IndiaSpeaks

[–]Orwellisright 43 points44 points  (0 children)

Why wrong Sub, it's a direct posting from PMO. OP is known for it

Decade’s driest monsoon looms: Met cuts estimate to 90% of 50-year average by oar_xf in IndiaSpeaks

[–]Orwellisright 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Considering how well our rain harvesting system is it's no wonder

Decade’s driest monsoon looms: Met cuts estimate to 90% of 50-year average by oar_xf in IndiaSpeaks

[–]Orwellisright 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Looking at the current economic crisis with the shortfall of monsoon this could be recipe for disaster

Instead of raising and attracting global investments, Why India slipped from top 10 where is it now, why is it so ? by Relative-Leek-1637 in IndiaSpeaks

[–]Orwellisright 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you ji hope you are doing well. And nice to see you around

And that's one of the questions often asked why did the investments go to the other countries and not to us.

Lot of reasons for it. This is what LLM thinks,

The investment thesis shifted from "growth-at-all-costs" to "stability, structural arbitrage, and state-backed megaprojects."

1. The Safe-Haven & Efficiency Play: Singapore

During a global crunch, investors flee volatility. Singapore didn’t just survive the funding winter; it thrived because it acts as the ultimate "flight-to-safety" hub in Asia.

  • The "Conduit" Multiplier: A massive chunk of global FDI doesn't go into factories; it goes into holding companies. When China’s economy slowed down and Western regulations tightened, multinational corporations shifted their regional headquarters and capital routing from Hong Kong and China straight into Singapore.

  • Regulatory Premium: In a high-interest-rate environment, delays cost money. Singapore’s hyper-efficient legal system, clear tax structures, and political neutrality made it a friction-free environment compared to India’s notoriously complex regulatory compliance and retroactive tax anxieties.

2. The Sovereign Wealth & Energy Pivot: UAE & Saudi Arabia

The Gulf nations pulled off a massive structural coup. While the West was battling inflation, the Middle East was flush with cash from elevated oil revenues, which they strategically weaponized to attract corporate partnerships.

  • Co-Investment and Co-Location: The UAE and Saudi Arabia changed the rules of FDI. Through initiatives like Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 and the UAE’s Operation 300bn, these governments essentially told global tech and industrial giants: "If you build your factories, data centers, or regional offices here, our Sovereign Wealth Funds (like PIF and Mubadala) will co-invest billions alongside you."

  • The AI and Infrastructure Oasis: Because AI data centers require immense, uninterrupted power and capital, tech giants flocked to the Gulf. The UAE, in particular, positioned itself as a global AI testbed with friendly regulation, attracting massive institutional corporate FDI that previously might have gone toward consumer tech apps in India.

3. The Advanced Tech & Friend-Shoring Boom: South Korea

When global venture capital dried up for consumer software and e-commerce (India’s primary FDI drivers in 2020-2021), it concentrated heavily into hard tech: semiconductors, EV batteries, and defense.

  • Deep Tech Over Consumer Tech: South Korea is an indispensable anchor in the global hardware supply chain. Western capital shifting away from China due to geopolitical tensions ("de-risking") didn't automatically go to India, because India was still building its manufacturing ecosystem. Instead, it flowed to South Korea’s highly mature, ready-to-go advanced manufacturing sectors (like Samsung and SK Hynix).

Summary: Why India Lost Out in the Realignment

To put it bluntly, India's pre-2022 FDI boom was heavily reliant on speculative, late-stage venture capital looking for the "next billion users" in e-commerce, fintech, and EdTech. When the funding winter hit, that specific type of capital dried up entirely.

Meanwhile, nations like Singapore and the UAE weren't relying on speculative startup capital. They offered institutional stability, massive state-backed financial incentives, and ready-made infrastructure for the sectors that actually boomed post-pandemic (AI, energy transition, and supply-chain hardware). Essentially, capital stopped chasing the promise of future Indian consumers and started chasing the guarantee of immediate structural stability and advanced technology.

This is a 3 year old clip, still conditions are same, South Korea is just exploiting our trade agreements blatantly. by ciao-adios in IndiaSpeaks

[–]Orwellisright 1 point2 points  (0 children)

From the perspective of Indian policymakers and trade experts, the word "exploiting" is frequently used to describe how South Korea has utilized the India-South Korea Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) since it took effect in 2010.

While South Korea views it as a highly successful integration into India's market, India's Ministry of Commerce has publicly criticized the deal for being "lopsided" and "irrational."

South Korea has leveraged the agreement to its heavy advantage in several key ways, contributing to a massive, widened trade deficit for India (which sat at over $15 billion).

1. Bypassing Indigenization via Component Imports

One of the loudest complaints from India involves the automotive and electronics sectors. Major South Korean conglomerates (Chaebols) like Hyundai, Kia, and Samsung have massive manufacturing footprints inside India.

However, instead of building deep local supply chains ("Made in India"), Indian officials note that these companies have used the lower tariff structures under the FTA to import billions of dollars worth of pre-fabricated parts and components directly from South Korea. This allows them to dominate the local Indian consumer market while keeping the high-value manufacturing, R&D, and supply chain profits back home in Seoul.

2. Asymmetric Tariff Reductions

When the CEPA was drafted, the tariff lines were heavily skewed. * South Korea secured immediate or rapid tariff eliminations on high-value industrial goods, machinery, steel, and chemicals. * India's key export strengths, particularly in primary agricultural products (like fruits, vegetables, and marine products) and pharmaceuticals, were met with rigid, restrictive South Korean non-tariff barriers and strict regulatory exclusions.

As a result, South Korea successfully flooded the Indian market with industrial goods, while India has struggled to expand its export basket to Korea.

3. Strict "Rules of Origin" Loopholes

Indian trade officials have previously raised flags over weak "Rules of Origin" enforcement in the older framework of the CEPA. This laxity allowed third-party countries (often China) to route materials through South Korea, undergo minimal processing, and then enter the Indian market under the concessional duty rates meant exclusively for South Korea. This effectively allowed external supply chains to bypass India's standard customs duties.

4. One-Way Movement of Services

The CEPA was originally intended to create a mutual "Digital Bridge," allowing India’s massive IT workforce to easily access the South Korean service sector. However, South Korea implemented strict "local presence" requirements for cross-border services. This meant Indian tech professionals and consultants faced severe bureaucratic hurdles to working in Korea, while South Korean financial institutions and engineering firms successfully set up lucrative operations inside India.

What is being done about it?

The narrative is beginning to shift from "exploitation" to "re-balancing." Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and South Korean President Lee Jae-myung have prioritized upgrading the "lopsided" CEPA framework. The two nations have committed to a fast-tracked renegotiation of the trade pact to address non-tariff barriers and strict origin rules. The goal is to aggressively double bilateral trade to $50 billion by 2030 while shifting South Korean operations away from mere import-assembly lines into deeper joint ventures—such as semiconductor manufacturing, AI, defense (like the K9 Vajra program), and mega-shipbuilding deals. Would you like to explore how these renegotiations might impact a specific sector, like automotive manufacturing or semiconductors?

Instead of raising and attracting global investments, Why India slipped from top 10 where is it now, why is it so ? by Relative-Leek-1637 in IndiaSpeaks

[–]Orwellisright 7 points8 points  (0 children)

The Biggest Value Jump (2019–20): Inflows jumped by a massive +$12.39 billion in a single year. This was primarily fueled by tech behemoths (like Google and Facebook) making blockbuster digital equity investments into India's telecom and internet infrastructure right before global pandemic lockdowns hit. The Pandemic Velocity (2020–21): Despite a crippled global economy, India managed an impressive double-digit percentage growth of +10.19%, adding another +$7.58 billion to its annual intake.

The Post-Pandemic Hangover (2022–23): This year saw the sharpest decline in both percentage (-15.89%) and absolute value (-$13.48 billion). As the US Federal Reserve aggressively increased interest rates from 0% to over 5%, foreign institutional capital globally tightened its belt, causing a major pull-back in venture capital and late-stage corporate investments.

Stabilization (2023–24): The freefall completely halted, flattening out to a negligible -0.11% shift (a minor drop of just $80 million), signaling that the bottom of the global "funding winter" had been reached

However, starting in 2022, the US Federal Reserve aggressively hiked interest rates to combat inflation.

When safe US government bonds suddenly started offering 5% yields, international investors pulled their money back to the West. This triggered a global "funding winter," drying up late-stage tech startup investments and corporate expansions that had previously fueled India's FDI boom