‘China focused on skills, India chose…’: Financial advisor slams India’s ‘freeloader culture’, sparks viral debate
China and India, one-third of humanity, have disagreed to build their future labor. China is in the Bank the relentless pushing of structural skills, the introduction of deep technology and the advancement of merit. It faded. China’s increase in the dominant supply networks from leading supply networks in AI and Engineering is not accidental. It’s a project.
At the same time, India is still facing a bureaucratic policy, a bureaucratic red strap, and the education system is more convenient than innovation. The result. The expansion gap is not only in development, but in ambitions. And here, the votes inside India are clearly calling it.
The CEO of the Wisdom Foundation Akshate Shrigastava did not grind words when he said that India had lost the development race against China. “We are no longer talking about competing with China. So we return to sing melodies how we are a democratic country. “
In another post that presents the video of the luxury industry of the luxury goods industry, he added Shriscuvavavavavavavavavavavavavavavavavavavavavavavavavavavavavan. “When you have skills, the world comes to you. The result is:
Shrivastava criticized India’s attention to reservations about the progress based on merit. “We are Indians.
“The classic case of incompetent persons who teach others how to be skilled,” he wrote. “End the result. We lost the development race against the Chinese. We no longer talk about competing with China. So we return to the choral country. And the Chinese are autocratic. “
The post stems from the debate, resonated with many users online.
“Your post hits hard, and I agree that India has lost to China’s development race, greatly focusing on the reservations of skills,” replied one user. “China’s emphasis is a priority for priority and innovation. However, I think that the democratic circle of India, while the confusion can stimulate that the Chinese system can stimulate. “
Another user mourns a public switch, writing: “We look lots of things every day.