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GLOBAL KHICHDI

PRESENTATION
ON
INDIA & FRANCE
BILATERAL TRADE OFINDIA & FRANCE
Bilateral relations
It starts between the Republic of India and the French Republic
were established in 1947 and both nations have since
established close co-operation in defence and commerce.
Development of bilateral relations
Both states have aimed to increase bilateral trade from 6.5
billion Euros to 12 billion Euros by 2012; in 2007, trade
expanded by 26%.France and India established a Consortium
of Indo-French Universities to increase educational
cooperation - approximately 1,300 Indian students study in
France. India and France have also signed agreements on
social security for Indians living in France and joint
cooperation on space research and technology.
BILATERAL TRADE OF INDIA & FRANCE
Areas France India
Population 65,447,374 1,190,340,000
Area 674,843 km² (260,558 sq 3,287,240 km2 (1,269,210 sq mi)
mi)
PopulationDensity 114/km² (295 /sq mi) 356/km² (922/sq mi)
Capital Paris New Delhi
Largest City Paris Mumbai
Government Unitary semi-presidential Federal parliamentary
constitutional republic
Official languages French Hindi and English, 21 other
languages
Main Religions 54% Christianity (51% 80% Hinduism, 13.4% Islam, 2.3%
Roman Catholicism), 31% Christianity, 1.9% Sikhism, 0.8%
non-religious, Buddhism, 0.4% Jainism
4% Islam, 1.2% Buddhism,
1% Judaism,
GDP (nominal) $2.784 trillion $1.367 trillion
CULTURE OF INDIA & FRANCE
CULTURE OF INDIA:-
The culture of India is an amalgamation of these diverse sub-
cultures spread all over the Indian subcontinent and traditions
that are several millennia old
It consists of:-
Religions and spirituality , Touching of Feet
Society , Festival
Family , Languages
Marriage , Cuisines
Namaste , Clothing
CULTURE OF INDIA & FRANCE
CULTURE OF FRANCE:-
The culture of France and of the French people has been
shaped by geography, by profound historical events, and
by foreign and internal forces and groups
Language:- The Académie française sets an official
standard of language purity however, this standard, which
is not mandatory, is even occasionally ignored by the
government itself
Religion:- French population describe themselves as
Catholics—and only half of those said they believed in
God--, 31% as atheists, 4% as Muslims, 3% as Protestants
and 1% as Jews.
PEOPLE OF INDIA & FRANCE
PEOPLE OF INDIA:-
Indian people or Indians constitute the Asian nation and
pan-ethnic group native to India, which forms the south of
Asia, containing 17.31% of the world's population.
Languages:-
The principal official language of the Republic of India is
Standard Hindi. The constitution of India states that "The
official language of the Union shall be Hindi in
Devanagari script."
PEOPLE OF INDIA & FRANCE
PEOPLE OF FRANCE:-
The modern French population is largely native-born and
represents a fusion of many peoples of Celtic, Germanic, Latin,
and Slavic origins
French society that today it is difficult to determine the ethnic
origins of most French citizens.
The French language is understood and spoken by virtually the
entire population,
About 80% of the population nominally belongs to the Roman
Catholic church, although only a minority of these participate
regularly in church activities. Protestants constitute less than 2%
of the population; Jews, about 1%; Muslims, who have entered
France recently from former North African colonies, about 4%.
ECONOMY OF INDIA & FRANCE
ECONOMY OF INDIA:-
 India's economy is the eleventh largest in the world by nominal
GDP and the fourth largest by purchasing power parity
(PPP).The country's per capita GDP (PPP) is $3,176 .
 India's large service industry accounts for 57.2% of the country's
GDP while the industrial and agricultural sector contribute 28%
and 14.6% respectively.
 Agriculture is the predominant occupation in India, accounting
for about 52% of employment. The service sector makes up a
further 34%, and industrial sector around 14%.
 Major agricultural products include rice, wheat, oilseed, cotton,
jute, tea, sugarcane, potatoes, cattle, poultry and fish.
 Major industries include telecommunications, textiles,
chemicals, food processing, steel, cement, mining, petroleum, IT.
ECONOMY OF INDIA & FRANCE
ECONOMY OF FRANCE:-
France is the world's fifth largest and wealthiest economy. It is the second
largest economy in Europe in nominal terms
SECTORS OF ECONOMY:-
Industry:- Leading industrial sectors in France are
telecommunications , aerospace and defense, ship building etc.
Energy:- France is the world-leading country in nuclear energy.
Agriculture:- France is the world's second largest agricultural exporter,
world's sixth-largest agricultural.
Tourism:- The Palace of Versailles is one of the most popular tourist
destinations in France. France is, by far, the world's first tourist destination
with more than 81.9 million foreign tourists.
Weapons industry:- France is the fourth largest weapons supplier in the
world. The French arms industry's main customer, for whom they mainly
build warships, guns, nuclear weapons and equipment, is the French
Government
GROWTH & DEVELOPMENT OF INDIA & FRANCE
INDIA:-
GROWTH & DEVELOPMENT OF INDIA & FRANCE
FRANCE:-
Since World War II (1939–45), France has implemented a series of economic plans.
The first plan (1947–53) was designed to get the machinery of production the basic
economic sectors—coal, steel, cement, farm machinery, and transportation
The second plan (1954–57) was extended to cover all productive activities, especially
agriculture, the processing industries, housing construction, and expansion of overseas
production.
The third plan (1958–61) sought, in conditions of monetary stability and balanced foreign
payments, to achieve a major economic expansion
The fourth plan (1962–65) called for an annual rate of growth of between 5% and 6% and
an increase of 23% in private consumption;
the fifth plan (1966–70), for a 5% annual expansion of production, a 25% increase in
private consumption
sixth plan (1971–75), for an annual gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate of between
5.8% and 6% and growth of about 7.5% in industrial production.
The seventh plan (1976–80) called for equalization of the balance of payments
the eighth plan (1981–85). It called for development of advanced technology and for
reduction of oil in overall energy consumption.
THANK YOU

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