I mean pretty much the entire world except us and Europe. For example India is an industrial nation but still has the "families should stick together and cover each other's expenses" ethic.
But ... that just isn't true about India being an "industrial nation". It was almost entirely an agricultural nation until very recently, which was my point. Currently,
67% of Indians live in rural areas. In a nation such as Australia, 10% live in rural regions.
Go to a big city in India, one that's industrial, and almost everyone there, they're no more than two generations away from the countryside. Gurgaon, which is considered one of the big financial hubs in India, like their version of Manhattan, only had the first industrial thing built there in the 1970s.
As a counter-example, UK has had a significant growing urban class since the 1700s. India only really got on the industrialization bandwagon in a serious way a few decades ago. The vast majority of the country still eke out a living out of the Earth. This is the point i was making about
post-WWII industrialized nations still having the extended family thing going. The grandparents remember when everything was farmland still.
BTW Britain had previously been a purchaser of Indian textiles, but during the colonial era they set things up, through trade laws and tariffs, so that India supplied raw materials only, which were processed in Britain then sold back to India at a profit. Output of Indian textiles, which had been their major export industry, in fact, collapsed.