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The '''Indian Century''' is a term used to describe the growing power of ] in the ]. It has been claimed that various trends will make the 21st century an ].{{Fact|date=July 2008}} The '''Indian Century''' is a term used to describe the growing power of ] in the ]. It has been claimed that various trends will make the 21st century an ].{{Fact|date=July 2008}}


India has been identified as an ]<ref>{{cite journal| url=http://www.twq.com/04winter/docs/04winter_perkovich.pdf| title=Is India a Major Power?|last=Perkovich|first=George|journal=The Washington Quarterly|issue=27.1 Winter ]-]|access=2007-12-13}}</ref> <ref name="Encarta"></ref> <ref>{{cite paper| author =Dilip Mohite| title =Swords and Ploughshares- India: The Fourth Great Power?| version =Vol. 7, No. 3| publisher =Arms Control, Disarmament, and International Security (ACDIS)| date =Spring ]| url =http://www.acdis.uiuc.edu/Research/S&Ps/1993-Sp/S&P_VII-3/great_power.html| format =HTML| accessdate = 2007-12-13}}</ref>. It is also often referred as South Asia's natural hegemon because of its overwhelming dominance of the region in all aspects &ndash; political, economic, military, cultural, and demographic. India contributes 77% of South Asia's population, 75% of its GDP, 77 percent of its territory, 80% of its defence budget, and 82% of its armed forces. India is the world's most populous democracy. It has the largest economy in the region,<ref name=wb/> and has impressive GDP growth which sits today at 9.2%<ref></ref> According to political analyst C. Raja Mohan: India has been identified as an ]<ref>{{cite journal| url=http://www.twq.com/04winter/docs/04winter_perkovich.pdf| title=Is India a Major Power?|last=Perkovich|first=George|journal=The Washington Quarterly|issue=27.1 Winter ]-]|access=2007-12-13}}</ref> <ref name="Encarta"></ref> <ref>{{cite paper| author =Dilip Mohite| title =Swords and Ploughshares- India: The Fourth Great Power?| version =Vol. 7, No. 3| publisher =Arms Control, Disarmament, and International Security (ACDIS)| date =Spring ]| url =http://www.acdis.uiuc.edu/Research/S&Ps/1993-Sp/S&P_VII-3/great_power.html| format =HTML| accessdate = 2007-12-13}}</ref>. It is also often referred as South Asia's natural hegemon because of its overwhelming dominance of the region in all aspects &ndash; political, economic, military, cultural, and demographic. India contributes 77% of South Asia's population, 75% of its GDP, 77 percent of its territory, 80% of its defence budget, and 82% of its armed forces. India is the world's most populous democracy. It has the largest economy in the region, and has impressive GDP growth which sits today at 9.2%<ref></ref> According to political analyst C. Raja Mohan:
"India's omnidirectional engagement with the great powers has paid off handsomely. Never before has India had such expansive relations with all the major powers at the same time—a result not only of India's increasing weight in the ] and its growing power potential, but also of New Delhi's savvy and persistent diplomacy." <ref></ref> "India's omnidirectional engagement with the great powers has paid off handsomely. Never before has India had such expansive relations with all the major powers at the same time—a result not only of India's increasing weight in the ] and its growing power potential, but also of New Delhi's savvy and persistent diplomacy." <ref></ref>



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The Indian Century is a term used to describe the growing power of India in the 21st century. It has been claimed that various trends will make the 21st century an Asian Century.

India has been identified as an potential superpower . It is also often referred as South Asia's natural hegemon because of its overwhelming dominance of the region in all aspects – political, economic, military, cultural, and demographic. India contributes 77% of South Asia's population, 75% of its GDP, 77 percent of its territory, 80% of its defence budget, and 82% of its armed forces. India is the world's most populous democracy. It has the largest economy in the region, and has impressive GDP growth which sits today at 9.2% According to political analyst C. Raja Mohan: "India's omnidirectional engagement with the great powers has paid off handsomely. Never before has India had such expansive relations with all the major powers at the same time—a result not only of India's increasing weight in the global economy and its growing power potential, but also of New Delhi's savvy and persistent diplomacy."

With the largest defence budget in the region, India possesses nuclear weapons, intermediate-range ballistic missiles, and is the only South Asian country with an aircraft carrier. It has successfully developed a Ballistic Missile Defense system, becoming only the fourth country to do so. In 2007, India became the fourth nation in the world to complete atmospheric reentry for Manned Space Mission, an indication of its recent scientific progress.

References

  1. Perkovich, George. "Is India a Major Power?" (PDF). The Washington Quarterly (27.1 Winter 2003-04). {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |access= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  2. Encarta - Great Powers
  3. Dilip Mohite (Spring 1993). "Swords and Ploughshares- India: The Fourth Great Power?" (HTML). Vol. 7, No. 3. Arms Control, Disarmament, and International Security (ACDIS). Retrieved 2007-12-13. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. India's Economic Growth Unexpectedly Quickens to 9.2%
  5. www.realclearpolitics.com
  6. Hindustan Times Giant step in space as capsule returns
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