Mahatma Gandhi.
2007-09-11 02:39:37
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answer #1
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answered by javeedahmedm 1
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Dr Man Mohan Singh, then the Finance Minister in the Cabinet of Mr. PV Narsimha Rao took the daring steps to introduce economic reforms in India, which ultimately lead to commencement of Globalisation .
2007-09-11 22:05:11
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answer #2
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answered by sb 7
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for globalisation pv narsimha rao is the one who has taken the daring step nd paved the way fr globalisation but the credit goes 2 both pv narsimharao nd manmohan singh then finance minister
2007-09-11 17:02:36
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answer #3
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answered by gsuresh4u 1
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Historically, Badshah Jehangir gave permission to trade to portugese in India & we had the bad outcome.
In modern days, we have the bad aspects of globalization now.
India needs electronic chips & not potato-chips which have come. India needed to export textile products, what we have is import of fancy garments & nappies. Good or bad, indian industry needs protection but govt. is slowly wiping of it's hands from responsibilities.
These are irreversible mistakes.
Now to answer ur q with name-it's Mr. Manmohan Singh, our P.M.
2007-09-14 00:28:01
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answer #4
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answered by JJ SHROFF 5
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* There is no founder of globalisation.
* The credit can be given to Mr. P.V. Narashima Rao for signing GATT agreement. Prior to him Mr. Rajiv Gandhi had visions.
2007-09-11 02:51:56
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answer #5
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answered by tdrajagopal 6
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globalization is a ability to help the rice maximize earnings via looking places on earth the place they are in a position to get products produced greater economical. this is not any longer something designed to help the unfavourable. If one village in India is making rugs, globalization will enable the shoppers of rugs to income the place there is yet another place that makes rugs greater economical, pass there to purchase rugs and positioned the village in India out of paintings. the wealthy help the wealthy. the wealthy prefer purely greater funds. they're addicted to their greed and to getting greater wealth. Globalization is the flexibility they used to end this.
2016-11-14 22:41:35
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Dr. Manmohan Singh PM
2007-09-11 05:48:28
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answer #7
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answered by Rana 7
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Globalization is hardly a new force affecting India. To think so is to ignore a diverse and pluralistic long-standing civilization that was shaped by a long list of "invading" (globalizing) cultures that became what we now know as India. The previous globalizers of India include the Aryans, Hindus, Dravidians, Greeks, Buddhists, Turks, Afghans, Scythians, Muslims and most recently, the Europeans, Portuguese, French, Dutch and finally the English. One has to understand that as India has been globalized it has also been a globalizer too, with millennia of colonialism across Southeast Asia, with temples like Angkor Wat left behind as a reminders of India’s one time presence.
Long viewed by the West, as "poor and impoverished," to its neighbors such as Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Pakistan, India is wealthy and powerful. To these smaller neighbors, India is a great power, a globalizer of its own, which expects deference from them and is sometimes angered when those nations downplay their Indian lineage. They prefer to play up their own local cultures, which are frequently hybrids of the larger Indian culture and their own indigenous ones.
India, knowing its past as a globalizer, sees itself as one of the great nations of the world. But today, India has yet to build on the onetime greatness of its civilization to earn international influence and respect. India sees itself as equally important as Russia, China and the U.S., believing it has much to offer the rest of the world. Historically this has a basis since important aspects of trigonometry were developed in India, as was the decimal system, which, was later taken from India by Arab mathematicians, and on to Europe in the 10th century, only to come back to India through books from the West. Similarly, at the start of the 18th century, India was a major economic power with 23 percent of the world’s GDP according to some economic historians and over 25 percent share of the global trade in textiles. By 1995, this had declined to less than 5 percent of world income and less than half a percent of world trade.
The most recent wave of globalization affecting India came with the British who were important to Indian development, in positive and negative ways. The British consolidated a land of many separate regions and kingdoms into what we know of as modern India. While the British exploited India’s population, economy and resources as colonial rulers, they also left India, after two centuries of rule in 1948, with democracy, laws, a judiciary, and a free press, 40,000 miles of railroad track, canals, and harbors. English as the language of Indian business and the English language schools are arguably some of the most important remnants of the British, giving India a linguistic global gateway not found in former French, Spanish or Dutch speaking colonies.
2007-09-11 22:55:45
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answer #8
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answered by ranjith 3
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vry gud q
i tell abt IT sector okee
the name is Dewang Metha
india's first IT Minister
2007-09-11 02:46:18
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answer #9
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answered by Amit G 4
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it would be the ancient traders ,European countries.but the first would be the ancient traders since they were the first who had trade in India from other countries.
2007-09-12 04:21:41
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answer #10
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answered by chincha 3
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