A Place in the Sun
India's rise is real, but it needs to spread the wealth
City of Dreams
A magnet for entrepreneurs, artists, jet-setters and foreign money, Bombay is the crucible of the new India
Life in Dharavi
Inside Asia's biggest slum
"Life is Calling"
Returing to his provincial hometown after 15 years, the author finds that it's yearning for some big-city action
Shaking the Foundations
How Ratan Tata turned the country' oldest conglomerate into a global force
Bangalore Goes Global
A labor crunch and foreign rivals force India's outsourcing hub to reinvent itself
The Drive to Compete
India's once woeful manufacturing sector is starting to pick up steam
Viewpoint: Hollywood Loves Bollywood
But why is it that India arrives only when the West says it does?

Photos: Bombay Dreams
Chaotic, crowded Bombay is the vital center of the New India
Photos: Mangalore Grows Up
How economic growth is pulling a once-sleepy Indian city into the 21st century
Graphic: Chasing China
Like its rival, India has produced staggering growth, but it still lags on most fronts

Mittal's Mettle
An ambitious steelmaker puts Indian industry on the map
[02/13/2006]
The Two Indias
Are the desperately poor being left behind?
[12/06/2004]
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BHARAT SIKKA FOR TIME 
STAR POWER: Czech model Yana Gupta may be Bombay's most famous immigrant

City of Dreams
A magnet for entrepreneurs, artists, jet-setters and foreign money, Bombay is the crucible of the new India

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Posted Monday, June 12, 2006; 20:00 HKT
The streets are wet with the dew of the coming monsoon as Rajeev Samant unveils his latest triumph in midtown Bombay. The Tasting Room is a soft-lit tapas bar built into a high-end furniture store in the city's old textile district. The idea is to showcase Samant's range of Indian wines in an environment that oozes class and cash, and with bottles costing twice the average Indian weekly wage, Samant means it to be exclusive. Tonight the 39-year-old founder of one of the country's largest vintners, Sula Vineyards, is hosting a group from Insead, the French business school, who are visiting India to see what all the buzz is about. Over Samant's Chenin Blanc and Reserve Shiraz, a handful of Bombay's traders and venture capitalists swap gossip with the students about who met whom when actor Will Smith and Hollywood mogul Jeffrey Katzenberg were in town a few months back. "You're so lucky to be here now," says Samant. "This is an incredible time. It's all happening. Right here, right now."

If there's a crucible of the new India, it's Bombay. Bangalore gets plenty of attention for its IT campuses and dotcom billionaires, but you wouldn't confuse Seattle with New York. Bombay is where the nation's first Rolls-Royce showroom opened in late May. It's home to the Bombay Stock Exchange Sensitive Index, which—even after its recent nosedive—has more than doubled in the past two years. It's where 40% of Indian tax is paid, where 40% of international flights land, where Time Out chose to launch a local edition and where Enrique Iglesias played India. It's the hometown of crime lords and Bollywood stars, sprawling slums and Manhattan-price condos, and of some of the hippest clubs and bars from Beirut to Bangkok. And with a population of 18.4 million, it's a world of its own. It hosts conventions for Japanese bankers and Brazilian anti-globalization protesters. It is where the U.S. Army sources its kitchen staff for the war in Iraq, and where your credit-card details might be stored or stolen. It's where club DJs steal back bhangra, the music of the Punjab, from London and New York. And it's a highbrow haven where British-Indian novelist Vikram Seth mixed the sensibilities of Charles Dickens with a little Indian spice to make the modern classic A Suitable Boy. To know Bombay is to know modern India. It is the channel for a billion ambitions. And it's globalization you can touch and walk around, a giant city where change is pouring in and rippling out around the globe.

What makes this dynamism all the more stunning is that it exists in spite of India's political and bureaucratic dysfunction. Ironically, for Bombay bad government may have meant good business. Decades of inept and sometimes corrupt rule have produced a city of self-starters. Sanjay Bhandarkar, managing director of Rothschild's India, says the city is a "disaster" in terms of government: "From that point of view, there are absolutely no arguments for being based in Bombay." But lack of state backup has helped to create an exceptionally able talent pool for employers. "The quality of the workforce is amazing," he says. "Things just happen here, because people have to make things work themselves." Rakesh Jhunjhunwala, a billionaire stock investor based in Bombay, says that with liberalization, the central government has sufficiently reduced its role in managing the economy that it can be virtually ignored. Bosses can now devote their energies to straightforward business, rather than outwitting the bureaucracy. That's not to say the government is actively helping. "Right now, India is like a runner without shoes," says Jhunjhunwala. "But look at that speed."

Continued...



A Few Good Men [May 29, 2006]
"The Ruling Caste" hails the incorruptibility of the small band of British bureaucrats who ruled the Raj

Battle of the Castes [May 29, 2006]
The Indian government's controversial affirmative action proposal stirs an age-old debate

India's Lust for Luxe [Apr. 03, 2006]
India's nouveaux riches are spending like never before, and high-end retailers from Hermès to Tiffany are eager to oblige

The Impact of Asia's Giants [Apr. 03, 2006]
How China and India could save the planet--or destroy it

The New India, and the Old One [Mar. 05, 2006]
The U.S. President was shown the nation's best face, but that's only half the story

Why Do So Many of India's Stars Live Abroad? [Feb. 04, 2006]
The country may be booming, but it still seems uncomfortable with the idea of celebrating success

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FROM THE JUNE 19, 2006 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED MONDAY, JUNE 12, 2006


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