239. GLOBALIZATION AND THE SINO-INDIA ECONOMIC COOPERATION

239.

Title                        : GLOBALIZATION AND THE SINO-INDIA ECONOMIC COOPERATION

Institution             : Shanghai Center for International Studies

Chair                      : Huang Ren Wei

Convener              : Wang De Hua

Discussant           :

Panel Abstract    :

As China and India quicken the step of reform and economic development, the cooperation issue of these two emerging new and largest markets attracts more and more attention. The simultaneous rise enables us to benefit from the bilateral economic cooperation, but there still exist many difficulties and disputes between China and India, and so it is very necessary to discuss on relevant issue for us Chinese and Indian experts and learners. At the same time, the lasting Sino- Indian economic cooperation can not only be favorable to solving the other bilateral disputes and enhance the trust, but also promote the inter-regional or even the inter-civilization dialogue and set up the new style of bilateral relationship.The intending international seminar should involve the next several questions:1. The retrospect of the Sino-Indian economic relationship after 1949. (Three stages) 2. The current situation of Sino-Indian economic cooperation and its features. (Booming but still too small and single) 3. The main difficulties in the bilateral economic relationship and the shock of globalization 4. How to face the globalization and strengthen the bilateral economic cooperation: suggestions and opinions

Participants         :  

Gao Zi Ping

Paper Title      : The Indians in Shanghai and the Sino-India Software Cooperation

Abstract          :

Now in Shanghai there are more than 3 thousand Indians, while many of them are software engineers.How about their curerent situation? How to make full use of such a lot of important humancapitals and increase the economic and technological cooperation between India and China ?There are four factors we have to consider: The first one is the citizenhood of these Indians in Shanghai and the possibility of dual nationality; The second is the market price of human forces and the rate of employment of Shanghai because of the fact that too many talents from inlands flew to Shanghai; the third is the distorted market mechanism and the continuous reform of economic reform; the last is the cultural gap between Indians and Chinese of Shanghai and so the relavant daily management issues Now there is both no the special policy to resolve such questions in Shanghai and India, and so the discussion and steps have to be taken in the next years in the wake of the continuous Sino-India economic cooperation and even the Whole Asia development.

Du You Kang

Ren Jia

Wang Chong Li