About 5,000 students from China, included for the first time in the The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development educational test, PISA, stunned the world by coming first across 65 countries in all three tested categories -- science (ahead of Finland), reading (beating Korea) and math (outperforming Singapore).
Indeed, China has been investing in a silent human capital revolution over the last decade. Since 1998, when Chinese President Jiang Zemin announced plans to bolster higher education, Chinese universities and colleges have increased the number of annual graduates from 830,000 to more than seven million last year.
On almost every front, India is in direct or indirect competition with China.
This is natural, as both are neighbouring resource-hungry countries, with large bustling populations and dynamic high-growth economies.
The ultimate advantage in this global competition will be the human capital of each country.
It will decide not just how well each
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