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020 _a9798885751759
040 _cAACR-II
082 _a337.3054 KUM
100 _aKumare, Susmit
_97219
245 _aIndia is a country, not a company
260 _aGurugram
_bGaruda
_c2024
300 _a296p.
520 _aFirst published in 2018, this book’s impact ensured that none of the Top 3 positions (RBI Governor, Chief Economic Advisor & Niti Aayog Vice-Chairman) got filled since then by imported economists! With 110 easy-to-understand charts and tables analysing the global economy. “Sometimes, an outsider can analyse data better than experts in the field.” Dr. Arvind Gupta Director of Vivekananda International Foundation (VIF), former Deputy National Security Adviser, Secretary, National Security Council, Government of India (2014–17), while introducing Dr. Susmit Kumar when he gave a talk on the first edition of this book in March, 2018 at the VIF. During World War II, when Hitler was in control of entire Europe which had its economy destroyed and needed huge money for reconstruction from the US and majority of other countries were still under their colonial rulers, the US made its currency dollar as global currency. The US just prints its currency, whenever it wants, to fund its trade deficits and budget deficits. According to economist Allan H. Meltzer at Carnegie Mellon University: “We [United States] get cheap goods in exchange for pieces of paper, which we can print at a great rate.” The US Dollar is a Ponzi scheme. The US just “prints” its currency to pay for its import from China and other countries and then in return such exporting countries, including India, deposit those dollars in US in government bonds and in the US share market. Unlike the US, India cannot print its currency to fund its deficits. Except the US, other three economic superpowers, Germany, Japan and China have trade surplus for more than three decades whereas due to the influence of the US “Imported” economists, who enforce and preach the disastrous “Reaganomics” policy, India never has trade surplus any year even after three decades of economic liberalization.
600 _aEconomy Sector
_97220
650 _aInternational Economics
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650 _aBilateral Economy
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942 _2ddc
_cB
999 _c357121
_d357121