For Korea, telecom infrastructure and indigenous technology development were to be carried out concurrently, as it was recognised that this alone would make the nation strong. This is where the difference between Korea and India lies.
South Korea wants to emerge as a global leader in the 21st century and knows that leadership in technology is the key to this. It does not talk about technology-neutrality and did not hesitate in preventing the deployment of competing comparable technology (in this case, GSM) within the country. In fact, it continues to do so.
Promotion of ones own technology and defining national standards so that companies from other countries can sell only by aligning with domestic standards and with local companies is not an approach unique to Korea.
The US did not allow GSM to enter its country for years, and Europe did not allow the operation of early generation CDMA within its territory.
Japan defined its own standards and did not allow either technology into the country. China in turn has now defined TDS-CDMA as a standard to benefit Chinese companies.
Developed countries and countries with a strong belief in their own capabilities seem to know how to use technology and standards for national benefit in this manner.
India, on the other hand, while making great strides in opening up the economy and building its telecom infrastructure since the mid-nineties, has paid little attention to how it can become a global technology leader.
The country still talks of technology-neutrality and continues to import everything lock-stock and barrel. This is so despite the fact that India has a much better established technology development capability compared to Korea, when it first set upon its task. The country still seems to believe that it can at best be a junior partner of multinationals from the West, who will continue to remain the technology leaders in future.
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