SNS: Special Letter: India in 2013

 

STRATEGIC NEWS SERVICE®

 

Weekly Report on

Technology and the Economy

 

16 Years Providing Weekly Foresight

 

The most accurate predictive letter in computing and telecommunications,
read by industry leaders worldwide.

 

SNS Subscriber Edition Volume 16, Issue 2 Week of January 14, 2013

 

***SNS***

Special Letter:

India in 2013

 

 

 

In This Issue

 

 

Feature:

Special Letter:

India in 2013

 

India in 2012

The Politics of Coalitions

The Politics of

Frequent Elections

Indian Federalism

and Governance

Can Rage Help?

India in 2013

About the Author

 

Upcoming SNS Events

& Media Links

 

In Other House News...

 

How to Subscribe

May I Share This Newsletter?

About SNS

About the Publisher

Where's Mark?

 

      [Please open the .pdf attachment for best viewing.]

 

By Rafiq Dossani

            SNS Contributing Editor [India]

___

 

Description: fire-2013-logo-stack-400 (2)Register now for the SNS Future in Review Conference. Join us for our 11th year, when FiRe will again be held at the beautiful Montage Laguna Beach Hotel, May 21-24:

 

www.futureinreview.com

 

___

 

See "Upcoming SNS Events" below for details on all SNS programs and registrations.

 

If you'd like to be more involved in SNS events as one of our select partners or sponsors, please contact Sharon at: sam@stratnews.com or 435-649-3645.

 

 

 

 

Publisher's Note: SNS members will note that our long-time India Editor, Rafiq Dossani, has now moved from Stanford University to the RAND Corp. Given his inside contacts in India, and his deep, on-the-ground understanding of India's prospects and challenges, it is no surprise that RAND wanted Rafiq. Luckily for us, he is now continuing his work in sharing real insights into India's status and workings with the rest of us.

 

In this Special Letter, Rafiq provides an amazingly detailed account of the internal political workings of the country that may well be the Next Big Thing in global economics. From political structures and their inherent weaknesses to the votes that matter, Rafiq has outlined the key constraints and promises that describe India's mid-term future.

 

Each time I read one of Rafiq's missives on this amazing nation, I think he can't later out-perform himself in combining inside knowledge with pragmatic understanding of this hamstrung, exciting, fascinating nation. And then, as here, he does just that. - mra.