Perhaps
it is because we have just reached critical
mass in America, some 2 million strong.
Or perhaps it is only because we only
just began taking a second look. Whatever
it is, there can be no denying that
Indian Americans are making quite a
splash.
Whether
it is the Mars probe to research and
investigations of 9/11, the heated controversies
over outsourcing to the passionate debate
over American foreign policy and Iraq,
reality TV to the unreal come-from-behind
victory of John Kerry in the Iowa caucuses,
Indians are sprouting up in the unlikeliest
of places.
To be sure, Indian Americans have long
been major players in the motel industry,
where they control almost half the industry;
they are by far the largest foreign
physician group in the country, and
they were the engines behind the dot
com boom -- and bust. But suddenly,
it seems, they are everywhere, to the
point that they now rank only behind
Mexicans as the largest source of immigrants
and among the fastest growing ethnic
groups in the United States, and they
have overtaken China as the largest
group of foreign students in the country.
Something
is definitely afoot here and just as
we have so often done in the past, Little
India peers ahead of the curve in identifying
and tracking this trend.
But these are small strokes on an even
larger canvas. A five-day World Economic
Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in January
spotlighted a rising Asian century,
powered by economic growth in China
and India. David Rothkopf of the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace, predicted
that long-term U.S. economic dominance
is “a figment of the overheated
imaginations of the post Cold-War period...
Whether it’s 10 years or 20 years
or 40 years hence, we see a new class
of rising major powers in the world.”
A Chinese
representative projected that China
would become the world’s second
largest economy by 2020. Microsoft Chairman
Bill Gates was even more upbeat, projecting
China’s GDP to surpass the United
States in 20 years. India, which has
one of the fastest growing economies
in the world presently, is equally bullish,
projecting economic growth rates as
high as 10 percent over the next two
decades.
The key to the ascendancy of the Asian
economies is recent economic and political
stability, which is unusual for the
region. In the case of India, that means
harnessing the economies of the subcontinent
and managing, if not resolving, its
intractable dispute with Pakistan over
Kashmir. Ironically, the drag on the
American economy is Bush’s reckless
and beligerent foreign policy of preemptive
wars and interminable global conflicts,
which are costing the nation billions
of dollars and sapping its economic
growth. Bush lied to the American public
about Iraq in rushing the country into
war. He was simply spoiling for a fight
that was easy to win and which politically
helped in burnishing his tainted election
victory.
During
the second half of the 20th century,
America enjoyed tremendous prosperity
as it harnassed and channeled the world’s
creative energies into economic development
through open trade and immigration laws
that attracted the world’s best
and brightest to its shores. The success
of Indian Americans is its tribute and
legacy.
America
is now squandering its creative genius
chasing shadow enemies in a cocky Texas-style,
shoot-from-the-hip strategy personified
by its smirking, outlaw president, as
it turns insular, closing it shores
to immigrants and turning its back on
free trade, as evidenced by the rising
backlash against outsourcing.
It is left to India and China, who have
in the past, frittered away their most
creative energies in wars and conflicts
to rise above their tangles and claim
the economic leadership that Bush seems
bent on abandoning.