India - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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India

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28 states make up India Each has its own state governor and parliament This governor is the chief executive of the state The president appoints the local governors. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: India


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Indias Government
  • 28 states make up India
  • Each has its own state governor and parliament
  • This governor is the chief executive of the state
  • The president appoints the local governors.
  • The Indian people elect the local parliaments
  • Unlike the US, the national government still has
    ultimate authority over all state matters.

3
Indias Government
  • Indias government operates as a Federal
    Republic.
  • Question-How is power distributed in a Federal
    Republic?

ANSWER-In a federal republic, power is divided
between the national and state or regional
governments.
4
Indias Government Economic System
  • Indias government operates as a
  • federal republic.
  • Power is divided between the
  • national and state governments.
  • The central government has three branches
    executive, legislative, and judicial.
  • The executive branch consists of the president,
    vice president, prime minister, and the Council
    of Ministers.
  • The president serves as the chief of state and
    acts as the nations chief representative.
  • Most of the real power rests with the prime
    minister.
  • Prime minister - leader of the government and
    Indias top official.
  • The leader of the majority party in parliament
    serves as the prime minister.
  • The Council of Ministers serves as the PMs body
    of advisors.

5
  • Indias parliament serves as the legislative
    branch.
  • It passes the countrys laws.
  • Indias Parliament is bicameral (has two houses).
  • The first house is called the Lok Sabha (House of
    the People), and the second house is the Rajya
    Sabha (Council of the States)
  • The judicial branch consists of Indias supreme
    court.
  • They are responsible for making sure the
    executive and legislative branches carry out
    their duties according to Indias constitution.

6
Indias Government
  • Indias President is President Pratibha PATIL
  • Question-How is the president of India chosen?

ANSWER- The president is elected by an electoral
college consisting of elected members of both
houses of Parliament and the legislatures of the
states for a five-year term.
7
Indias Government
  • Indias Prime Minister is Manmohan SINGH
  • Question-How is the prime minister of India
    chosen?

ANSWER- prime minister chosen by parliamentary
members of the majority party following
legislative elections.
8
INDIA
  • Overpopulation (more people than an area can
    comfortably support) presents environmental
    problems
  • for countries like India.
  • More people means that more land is used for
    faming, grazing, and development.
  • This disrupts the environment and can create
    areas in which food and vegetation cannot
    grow.
  • The need for fuel and the desire to industrialize
    also leads to deforestation (destruction of
    rainforests)
  • As the number of people increases, more forests
    areas have to be destroyed to make room for
    homes, farms, cities, and businesses.
  • Increased population means that more people
    generally drive cars, work in factories, produce
    products, and power the economy

9
  • While these are not necessarily bad things they
  • increase air pollution.
  • In India, air pollution has created a cloud that
  • stretches across much of South Asia known as
  • the Asian Brown Cloud.
  • It is a polluted mass of air that some
    scientists fear could harm millions of
    people across the world.
  • Similar clouds are developing over East Asia,
    South America, and Africa.
  • Water pollution is also a problem.
  • As the population grows, more and more people
    use water supplies like the Ganges River.
  • People along the Ganges often use this river as a
    sewer and deposit for trash, as well as drinking,
    bathing, and religious rituals.
  • Meanwhile, in more developed areas, waste from
    factories can pollute the Ganges and other bodies
    of water.

10
Literacy
  • Literacy (the ability to read and write) is very
    important for a nations development.
  • Like most other parts of the world, Asian nations
    work to try and improve their countries literacy
    rate.
  • More developed nations, like Japan and South
    Korea, have high rates.
  • Less developed nations, like India, tend to have
    lower literacy rates.
  • High literacy means that a population is educated
    and prepared to compete with the rest of the
    world politically economically, and otherwise.
  • The more nations increase their literacy
  • rate, the easier time they have growing
  • economically and improving their citizens
  • quality of life.

Country Literacy Rate
Japan 99
China 91
Indonesia 90
India 61
Pakistan 54
Bangladesh 44
11
Impact of Location, Climate, and Population
India
  • A countrys location directly affects what
  • it is able to trade, what agricultural
  • products it grows, and what industries
  • it supports.
  • India trades a lot of gems that are naturally
    found in the country.
  • Due to its cotton crops, it also exports a lot of
    textiles.
  • India also exports leather goods, engineering
    equipment, and manufactured goods
  • Much of Indias agriculture takes place on small
    farms.
  • Among the most common crops are cereal, grains
    like rice, wheat, sorghum, corn, and millet.
  • Rice is the most popular crop because it grows
    well in the wet, hot climate that covers much of
    the country.
  • India also depends on other key natural
    resources, such as petroleum, coal, iron, copper,
    gold, zinc, lead, and bauxite.

12
  • India has plentiful natural resources including
    coal, iron ore, diamonds, oil, and a variety of
    minerals and metals.
  • It has a large population, second only to China.
  • The middle class in India is large and continues
    to grow.
  • There is, however, a rather large portion
    (28) of Indias population that lives
    below the poverty line.

13
  • Indias economy is a mixed market economy
  • The government still controls industries and
    businesses to some degree, but not nearly as much
    as it once did.
  • After years of operating as a command economy,
    India changed course in the last couple of
    decades.
  • Leaders discovered that state controlled
    production hurt Indias economy.
  • In the last twenty years, India has
  • allowed more private ownership
  • and market competition.
  • As a result, Indias economy has
  • grown tremendously and the
  • country is becoming a major
  • player in world trade and
  • international business.

14
Impact of Trade on India
  • Trade has played a crucial role in the
  • development of Asian nations.
  • In recent years, India has moved away from a
    command economy to a market economy.
  • It sold many state owned industries to
    private companies and opened its
  • markets to foreign trade.
  • Foreign investment quickly rose.
  • Development and revenue increased.
  • Eventually, this increased Indias production
    and exports.
  • Poverty and decreased and more middle-class
  • consumers exist in India than ever before.
  • Better health care, more public services,
  • improved education and a higher literacy rate
    have
  • accompanied the economic improvements.

15
Trade Barriers
  • Trade barriers are anything, either man made
  • or natural, that interfere with trade.
  • As the world continues to globalize
  • (become more connected), more and more
  • trade barriers are being removed.
  • For example, when Western nations end tariffs,
  • this helps countries like India.
  • Tariffs raise the price of imports.
  • When nations do away with tariffs, Asian
  • products cost less.
  • This means more people buy them.
  • However, trade barriers can be useful for Asian
    nations seeking to protect their own markets.
  • Without restrictions on foreign trade, less
    developed nations sometimes have a hard time
    catching up to more developed economies.

16
Asian Currencies
India
Rupee
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