I think the United States must realise that today 60 to 70 per cent of the growth of the revenues of large American companies comes from India and China.
In the wake of the Mumbai siege, business must weigh the persistence of political violence against the strength and promise of the Indian miracle.
Workers raised in an age of economic optimism want it all, and they want it now.
Here's a textbook case of how to win and keep a customer: It shows how the combination of relationship building and providing service that goes beyond the call of duty pays off for Wipro. The tale starts in 2003, just a few years after Germany's TUI (for Touristik Union International) AG, the world's largest travel company, was assembled through a series of acquisitions.
Infosys and other Indian companies are recruiting more locals in the U.S.
Crumbling roads, jammed airports, and power blackouts could hobble growth.
By putting $10 billion into the country's infrastructure, Cayman Islands-based real estate investor Trikona Capital plans to do well by doing good.
One Laptop Per Child's breakthrough software replaces the standard PC look with a design for the networked age.
GramIT brings tech-services jobs to rural areas-and transforms villagers' lives.