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Indian Jobs & Placements
India is today one of the most exciting markets for foreign
tradewith a large base of import and export centric industries.
The Indianmiddle class whose size exceeds the population of several
Europeancountries put together with a large purchasing power and
skilled managerial and technical manpower provide India with distinct
advantages in global trade.
Until the foreign exchange crisisof 1991 India's import-export
policy had the three objectives ofpreserving employment in import-competing
industries through trade and other barriers, promotion of self-reliance
across all industries especiallyexport led sectors and revenue
raising through foreign trade tariffs.This created an inward looking
economy where all exports were desirableand all imports were to
be restricted.
However since 1991, India hasembarked on a programme of economic
and trade liberalisation impactingthe contours of the country's
foreign trade in a very big way. Thisprocess has further been
hastened by the country's active role in GATTand WTO. India has
agreed with these bodies for a structured andgradual dismantling
of its existing foreign trade tariff structurewhich is even now
restrictive with a near free trade scenario by2005.
The results of this new traderegime contrary to alarmist predictions
by some India's forex resourceshave swelled and the country was
one of the very few islands of stability during the recent Asian
crisis. This positive experience has enabled the government to
negate opposition from political and bureaucratic establishments.
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