Caixin
Sep 11, 2023 07:23 PM
WORLD

India Spends Big on What It Needs Most to Catch Up to China

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Construction crews work on a coastal road project on Feb. 1 in Mumbai, India. Photo: VCG
Construction crews work on a coastal road project on Feb. 1 in Mumbai, India. Photo: VCG

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By Jason Douglas and Vibhuti Agarwal

(The Wall Street Journal) — The financial capital of India has become a colossal construction site. The barriers that try to keep daily life on track in the metropolis on the country’s west coast proclaim: “Mumbai is upgrading.”

A new road being built along the Arabian Sea is aimed at easing congestion in a city where three-lane roads are frequently occupied by five lanes of honking traffic. A rapid-transit metro system is being extended to ease pressure on suburban trains overflowing with people. A rail freight corridor stretching all the way to New Delhi is expected to cut the time it takes to ship goods along the 870 miles to 14 hours — from 14 days.

The construction in Mumbai reflects a national push in India to transform a country where economic growth has long been snarled by crumbling and inefficient infrastructure. In recent years, the government has poured money onto the problem, an effort that has only accelerated as Western governments and multinationals have grown uneasy over relying on China for manufactured goods.

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