Think India Audiobook By Vinay Rai, William L. Simon cover art

Think India

The Rise of the World's Next Superpower and What It Means for Every American

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Think India

By: Vinay Rai, William L. Simon
Narrated by: Kent Cassella
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About this listen

With 1.1 billion residents, the world's largest democracy is poised to dominate the world stage. One of India's wealthiest men gives an insider's view into his country's dynamic transformation, revealing the forces and unique characteristics behind India's meteoric rise.

The buzzword of the 21st century is "India" - and it's not just a story of software, outsourcing, and faraway call centers. With the economy soaring at eight percent a year, India is a medical and pharmaceutical front-runner, an R&D powerhouse, a rising manufacturing hub, and an up-and-coming cultural trend-setter in areas from fashion to film. And the world is taking note: Western companies from Lockheed Martin to McDonald's are moving in, Ford is setting up factories, Coca-Cola is heading to the countryside in rickshaws, and research centers for Fortune 500 companies are popping up everywhere. Meanwhile, the U.S. military is forging close ties, as India has become a key strategic partner.

Steel-tycoon-turned-educator Vinay Rai, who now runs one of India's two private universities (includng 15 campuses) joins sociology professor William Simon to map out the rising new India. This colorful, lively, forward-looking account of India's stunning world debut is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the country's new muscle on the global stage. Consider:

  • One out of every six people in the world lives in India.
  • India's top trading partner is the United States.
  • India is the fastest-growing free-market economy.
  • India is the world's top destination for retailers.
  • India has the world's youngest workforce (over 500 million people under 25).
  • ©2007 Vinay Rai and William L. Simon (P)2007 Tantor Media Inc.
    Economic Conditions Globalization International United States Imperialism Self-Determination
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    What listeners say about Think India

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    • Overall
      3 out of 5 stars

    Think India - a biased view

    Author seems to be very biased on the narration of the facts. Everything seemed to be glorified and it becomes less useful if the facts are tainted so much for the common public.
    It appears more as author's wishful thinking than a commentary on reality.
    Having said these, I still would like to commend Mr. Rai on writing on this topic that is much on strategically, geo-politically, socially important part of the world.

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    3 people found this helpful

    • Overall
      1 out of 5 stars

    Shrill and not too informative

    I found this to be low on meaningful content, a rather shrill or florid writing style, and I was very disappointed because the theme had sounded very interesting.

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    3 people found this helpful