‘China focused on skills, India chose…’: Financial advisor slams India’s ‘freeloader culture’, sparks viral debate

China and India, the home of a third of humanity, have taken different paths in building their future working bases. China depends on developing organized skills, investing in deep technology, and unavoidable payment for merit. I resulted. From controlling supply chains to driving in artificial intelligence and engineering, China’s rise is not a coincidence – it is planned.
Meanwhile, India is still struggling with fragmented policies, bureaucratic red strip, and a more harmonious educational system than memorization than innovation. The result? A widening gap, not only in development but in ambition. Now, voices within India publicly describe.
Sherfastava, CEO of the Haksh Haksh Fund, did not empty words when he said that India had lost the development race against China. “We are no longer talking about competition with China anymore. So, we return to the singing of melodies how we are a democratic country,” as I posted on X (previously Twitter).
In another post that includes a video of China’s turmoil in the manufacture of luxury goods, Shrivastava added, “When you have skills, the world comes to you. Over the past four decades, Chinese obsessive with improving their skills.
Sriffastava criticized India’s focus on reservations on the merit -based progress. “We are the Indians – on the other hand – demanded more reservations. We have come to some extent now: you have independent free people who record a large percentage of fat 0 in competitive exams. Yes, they become teachers. They know others.”
“The classic state of people who are not competent who teach others how to be skilled,” wrote. “The end result: We lost the race against the Chinese. We are not even talking about competition with China anymore. So we return to the singing of melodies how to be a democratic state. The Chinese are from tyranny.”
The publication sparked a discussion, and a rumor is echoed with many online users.
One of the users answered: “Your message is escalating hard, and I agree that India has left China in the development race, due to a great extent to the focus on reservations on building skills.” “China’s focus on competing for costs and the dominance of the supply chain is a lesson in giving priority for entitlement and innovation. However, I think the democratic framework in India, while chaos also provides unique strengths such as enhancing various ideas and flexibility that the China regime may lack.”
Another user expressed his regret for the general separation, as he wrote, “We have many things that we boast about on a daily basis. The ordinary Indians have the idea that he is under five decades behind China, and in the next decade he goes to a century behind China.”
2025-04-14 10:20:00