Political Science, asked by haldermedicine, 6 months ago

Where does India stand as compared to Africa
and Latin America ?​

Answers

Answered by CUPCAKE2103
4

Answer:

Latin America is generally understood to consist of the entire continent of South America in addition to Mexico, Central America, and the islands of the Caribbean whose inhabitants speak a Romance language.

Answered by tabaraksuhailfareed
1

Answer:

mark me as brainliest hope this helps and this isnt full answer cuz i reached the limt u type the qs in google u get the first answer thats the answer

Explanation:

In this part of the world, myths intersect with history, and magic blends with realism. Think of Latin America, and it conjures up vibrant images of a spinning carnival of life: soccer, samba and story-telling. Yes, Latin America is all of these, and much else. It’s an emerging growth pole of the world.

And the good news is that it’s time for Latin America in India’s diplomacy. When India’s newly-elected Prime Minister Narendra Modi heads to Brazil July 15-16 for the sixth BRICS summit, he will probably become the first Indian leader to meet the leaders of a dozen South American countries at one place. The meeting, to be held as part of the BRICS’ outreach to South America, looks set to open new windows of engagement and opportunities between Asia’s third largest economy and a resource-rich vibrant region that is rapidly emerging as an economic dynamo and a growth pole in the world.

Brazil’s President Dilma Roussef, the host of the sixth BRICS summit, has invited the leaders of Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Surinam, Uruguay and Venezuela. Most of them are reported to have accepted the invitation, and if all goes well, Prime Minister Modi is set to meet them in Brasilia, a day after the first leg of the summit in Fortaleza.

Why Latin America Matters

The meeting, which is taking place barely within a couple of months of Mr Modi taking charge of the world’s most noisy and vibrant democracy, is set to fire the imagination of a business-friendly prime minister who is looking to raise India’s global profile and expand the country’s footprints with the region which boasts a combined GDP of $4.9 trillion and is home to 600 million inhabitants, nearly half the population of India, but with a landmass five times that of India. The region’s economic resurgence is an unfolding story, which has made it a powerful magnet for foreign investment from near and far. Latin America, according to a report by Economic Commission for Latin America and Caribbean of the United Nations, netted 179 billion dollars of FDI in 2013, the highest record for any region in the world.

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