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What We Said
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In 2008, Geely ranked dead last in China's quality survey. By 2024, Volvo's best-selling EV was built on a platform Geely designed. What happened in between is the most important business story Indian auto companies aren't paying attention to.India's biggest conglomerates — JSW, Dixon, Exide — are signing deal after deal with Chinese partners. Licensing platforms from SAIC and Chery. Sourcing battery technology from SVOLT. Assembling smartphones with 90% imported components. The factories are enormous. The patents are zero.Geely took a different path. It bought Volvo in 2010, spent 15 years embedding Chinese engineers alongside Swedish ones, and systematically absorbed the capability to design vehicles — not just build them. Xiaomi did it even faster, going from zero automotive experience to 600,000 vehicles delivered in 22 months.This video breaks down Geely's four-phase absorption model, contrasts it with India's current licensing-dependent approach, and asks the question no one in Indian industry seems to be asking: when does the learning start?
In 1986, China and India both launched indigenous jet engine programmes. Same year. Same ambition. Four decades later, China's WS-15 powers a stealth fighter. India's Kaveri was cancelled. The difference wasn't talent or money. It was what China was willing to pay.
For decades, economists and policymakers have thrown around the phrase "Hindu Rate of Growth" to describe India's economic stagnation before 1991. But what if I told you this term has almost nothing to do with Hinduism, and everything to do with covering up the real culprit—socialist economic planning?It's time that serious academics refrain from using such an ill-founded and prejudiced term. Hindus are not scapegoats to be thrown under the bus for every mishap that occurred in Indian history. You can read here: https://swarajyamag.com/economics/hindu-rate-of-growth-a-tale-of-prejudices-and-fallaciesYou can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts. https://open.spotify.com/show/1CzvC1mqq2BApXyoINGIEw?si=eec7dfe982874ff2
In this episode, we will talk about how China is building its railway network in Tibet to dominate the LAC. Beijing has begun laying the next section of its railway network to gird the entire Line of Actual Control (LAC), creating a steel backbone that will stretch from Aksai Chin in the west to Arunachal Pradesh in the east.You can read here: https://swarajyamag.com/defence/how-china-is-building-a-rail-network-in-tibet-to-dominate-the-lacYou can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts. https://open.spotify.com/show/1CzvC1mqq2BApXyoINGIEw?si=eec7dfe982874ff2
In this episode we will talk about how India built its own satellite navigation system, NavIC, to free India from GPS dependence and to never face the helplessness again. And how, 25 years later, that system is one atomic clock failure away from complete collapse.You can read here: https://swarajyamag.com/science/navic-how-indias-alternative-to-gps-is-hanging-by-a-threadYou can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts. https://open.spotify.com/show/1CzvC1mqq2BApXyoINGIEw?si=eec7dfe982874ff2
For E20, consumers are paying the same price per litre as they did for 100 per cent petrol but getting far less distance in return, effectively spending more to go the same distance.The E20 rollout was supposed to be a climate win. Instead, it’s leaving Indians with damaged engines, tanking mileage, and silent price hikes, while offering no real choice or relief to the Indian consumer.You can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts. https://open.spotify.com/show/1CzvC1mqq2BApXyoINGIEw?si=eec7dfe982874ff2
China is targeting India’s critical infrastructure, like power grids, emergency networks, and digital infrastructure, not to disrupt today but to control the outcome of tomorrow’s conflict. How and why? Find out in this episode.You can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts. https://open.spotify.com/show/1CzvC1mqq2BApXyoINGIEw?si=eec7dfe982874ff2
India now hosts 60 million stray dogs roaming our streets. And every single day, 5,740 people are bitten by dogs in India. That's one person every 15 seconds. India's stray dog menace is concerning, and in this episode we talk about the problems and also how other countries have been able to manage it.You can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts. https://open.spotify.com/show/1CzvC1mqq2BApXyoINGIEw?si=eec7dfe982874ff2You can read the article here: https://swarajyamag.com/reports/why-every-dog-lover-should-be-horrified-by-indias-stray-dog-crisis
For decades, America has been the undisputed champion at attracting global talent. They've had the best universities, the most funding, and the most opportunities. But since 2008, China, with its 'Thousand Talent Plan,' has been successful in attracting around 7,000 scientists, academics, and entrepreneurs. How exactly? We break it down in this episode of 'What We Said'.You can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts. https://open.spotify.com/show/1CzvC1mqq2BApXyoINGIEw?si=eec7dfe982874ff2
In this episode of "What We Said," we talk about the high-value, low-volume, and globally in-demand speciality chemicals that can be India’s next big manufacturing story.You can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts. https://open.spotify.com/show/1CzvC1mqq2BApXyoINGIEw?si=eec7dfe982874ff2
In this episode of "What We Said," we talk about how to fix Indian street food's hygiene problems, which come at a staggering cost: 100 million foodborne illnesses and 12,000 deaths in India every year. That's fifteen billion dollars annually—not just in medical bills, but in lost productivity, in dreams deferred, and in lives cut short.You can read the article: https://swarajyamag.com/culture/the-masala-to-make-indian-street-food-hygienic-needs-more-ingredients-than-just-rulesYou can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts. https://open.spotify.com/show/1CzvC1mqq2BApXyoINGIEw?si=eec7dfe982874ff2
In this episode of "What We Said," we talk about how China has quietly built a resilient triad of BeiDou satellites, eLoran towers, and fibre-linked timing grid that could outperform GPS, giving Beijing a critical edge in a contested space domain.You can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts. https://open.spotify.com/show/1CzvC1mqq2BApXyoINGIEw?si=eec7dfe982874ff2
In this episode of "What We Said," we discuss why the grand reform to simplify India’s taxation is now tangled in complexity and desperately needs a fundamental reset, not a patchwork fix.You can read the article: https://swarajyamag.com/economy/why-gst-needs-a-factory-resetYou can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts. https://open.spotify.com/show/1CzvC1mqq2BApXyoINGIEw?si=eec7dfe982874ff2
First Yogi's "courtesy call" to Delhi, then Shah's visit to Lucknow. In this episode of 'What We Said', we discuss what the changing Yogi Shah equation means for Uttar Pradesh.You can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts. https://open.spotify.com/show/1CzvC1mqq2BApXyoINGIEw?si=eec7dfe982874ff2
In this episode of "What We Said," we discuss why India despite having enough coal to power itself still spends $38 billion a year importing the coal.You can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts. https://open.spotify.com/show/1CzvC1mqq2BApXyoINGIEw?si=eec7dfe982874ff2
In this episode of "What We Said," we discuss why even with all the world's money and determination, breaking China's grip on rare earth elements might be impossible in the near future.You can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts. https://open.spotify.com/show/1CzvC1mqq2BApXyoINGIEw?si=eec7dfe982874ff2
In this episode of "What We Said," we discuss why Bikaner, with 95 per cent of India’s potash reserves and clay matching Ukrainian imports, could be India’s next big thing.You can read the article: https://swarajyamag.com/economy/atmanirbharta-begins-in-the-desert-why-bikaner-is-indias-next-big-thingYou can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts. https://open.spotify.com/show/1CzvC1mqq2BApXyoINGIEw?si=eec7dfe982874ff2
In this episode of "What We Said," we discuss how China’s aviation journey offers a blueprint for India — and what India can learn from both its successes and costly mistakes.You can also tune in to the "What This Means" podcast by Swarajya, where we decode major stories with experts.




