Развитая Британия может давать Индусам 400000 виз( причем многократные) в Год(больше всех в мире получаем мы) а россия боиться.а почему?
Может разница в подходе а если боиться за нехватка территории или если Индусы остануться у себя это они должны а русским зачем.меня это поражает тем более желаюших то мало сюда попасть.
http://financialexpress.com/latest_full_story.php?content_id=106928&headline=For~UK,~India~is~still~No.~1
BANGALORE, OCTOBER 27: Britain would issue a record number of four lakh multiple entry visas to Indians this year, British High Commissioner to India Michael Arthur said Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of trade-show Bangalore IT.IN that commenced here, he said Britain has already issued three lakh visas to Indians this year.
"The number of visas given to India is more than the number given to any country in the world," he said. It is an all-time record, the envoy added.
Arthur said the bilateral trade is set to cross $10 billion in the current financial year.
India's exports to the UK have risen by 47 per cent and imports from Britain to India by 31 per cent during the first quarter of this financial year, he said.
"Bilateral relations have never been closer," he told the inaugural function of the four-day IT event, where he is leading a 25-member delegation.
On BPO-outsourcing debate in Britain, Arthur said "there is no big household name...British company really which hasn’t got some form of business critical functions provided" by firms in India.
He said so much of outsourcing has gone on that it's gone into the heart of more companies, and Indian companies have become critical to the functioning of British firms who are outsourcing.
While the debate is a sensitive one back home, the British government fully recognises that if a British company wants to outsource to Bangalore if that's good business for it, then "we believe that's good for British economy."
Asked if the outcry against outsourcing is losing steam in Britain, Arthur replied: "yes" and then added: "it never had a lot of steam."
He termed outsourcing as an inevitable part of globalisation. "We are a flexible economy, and that's the way it's going to get. You can’t stop water flowing downhill."
Responding to questions, the envoy said Britain is pushing the Indian government to liberalise the insurance sector further.
Noting that four of the five big British insurance companies have presence in India, he said: "we are very much likely to do more business in India, and there are constraints on the degree of foreign capital (FDI) into the insurance arena...That's something we are pushing the Indian government to liberalise."
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