I left for boarding school in America in 1991. Since then, I’ve watched India’s transformation with exhilaration, but occasionally, and increasingly, with some anxiety. For much of my life, my two homes were literally - but also culturally, socially and experientially - on opposite sides of the planet.Īll that began changing in the early 1990s, when India liberalized its economy. In truth, though, the India and America of my youth were very far apart: cold war adversaries, America’s capitalist exuberance a sharp contrast to India’s austere socialism. I spent many summers (and the occasional biting, shocking winter) in rural Minnesota. I grew up in rural India, the son of an Indian father and American mother. It signals the latest episode in India’s remarkable process of Americanization. Amazon has already started a comparison shopping site Starbucks plans to open its first outlet this summer.Īs one Indian newspaper put it, this could be “the final stamp of globalization.”įor me, though, the arrival of these two companies, so emblematic of American consumerism, and so emblematic, too, of the West Coast techie culture that has infiltrated India’s own booming technology sector, is a sign of something more distinctive. Recently, both Starbucks and Amazon announced that they would be entering the Indian market. ANOTHER brick has come down in the great wall separating India from the rest of the world.
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