The Great PretenderIndias Economic Past and Future by Satyajit Das - **A MUST READ for INDIAN Users*

AsifAmeer

Siasat.pk - Blogger
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A Personal Note: Das is the WallStreet 1.0 original derivatives designer/trader. Over the years I have learnt quite a bit from Das. And an AMAZING AMAZING writer! This guy is truly gifted. Witty, smart, humble and down to earth. Here.. judge it yourself.

This is a 3-part long article but worth reading every bit of it!

http://www.economonitor.com/blog/20...conomic-past-and-future-part-1-india-shining/


The Great Pretender–India’s Economic Past and Future: Part 1, ‘India Shining’
Author: Satyajit Das May 26th, 2012

In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, optimists hoped that the BRIC (Brazil Russia India China) would drive the global economic engine. But China’s economic growth has slowed to its lowest rate in three years. Brazil’s economic growth has fallen from around 7.5% to under 3%. Russia’s economy is heavily dependent on oil and energy prices. India also has stalled. This 3-part paper looks at the development and future trajectory of the “I” in the “BRIC.” The first part looks at the background to India’s recent rise.


Despite the world and its citizens earnest desires, India seems destined to never fulfill its economic potential.


Hindu Growth…

In the 30 years following independence, India achieved a modest rate of economic growth of 3-4% per annum and incomes improved by 1-2% each year. This was the “Hindu rate of growth”; a derogatory term coined by economist Raj Krishna to draw attention to India’s poor performance compared to other Asian economies.

India’s poor economic performance was not driven by religious factors but the half-baked socialist policies of its leaders. India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru admired the Soviet Union, becoming one of the few followers of its ultimately unsuccessful economic policies.

The economy was administered by a central Planning Commission, through a series of 5 year plans, modelled on a similar process used in the Soviet system. Major businesses were State owned and operated. Private firms required official licenses, their operations being strictly controlled by the regulatory regime, rather than free-market demand.

The Indian economy was closed to the world. The principal policy was import substitution and a reliance on internal markets for development. India’s currency, the rupee, was inconvertible. A system of high tariffs and import licensing restricted foreign imports.

This was the era of the “License Raj”, a reference to the elaborate licenses, regulations and stultifying red tape required to operate businesses in India. Consents from up to 80 government agencies were required before private companies could produce goods and services. Under the terms of a license, the government regulated all aspects of operations, including production levels, prices, investment policy and financing. The government restricted businesses from laying off workers or closing factories.

At the time of its independence, India was a stable relatively open economy with high rates of economic growth and significant international trade and investment. By the 1980s, three decades of poor economic management meant India had low growth rates, was closed to trade and investment and prone to instability.


Desperate Revolution…

In the 1980s, India made tepid efforts at reform. By the early 1990s, the country was in dire straits. A combination of international factors (high oil prices) and domestic failures (public finance problems and political turmoil) left the nation effectively bankrupt. Remaining foreign exchange reserves were only sufficient to cover payments for less than 2 weeks. The Reserve Bank of India (“RBI”), the country’s central bank, was forced to airlift 47 tonnes of gold to the Bank of England as humiliating collateral for a loan, while it waited for assistance from the International Monetary Fund.

On 24 July 1991, Manmohan Singh, the current Prime Minister and then Minister of Finance, told the Indian parliament that “the room for manoeuvre, to live on borrowed money or time, does not exist any more.” Mr. Singh succeeded in passing a reformist budget, devalued the rupee and opened the door to foreign investment in certain industries. He also reduced the tariffs and eased the system of licenses.

Mr. Singh ended his speech to parliament quoting French author Victor Hugo: “No power on earth can stop an idea whose time has come.” Within the next decade, the idea of India as a “major economic power in the world” seemed within reach.


Innians’ Success…

The actions of 1991 paved the way for a period of expansion and relative prosperity for India. Over the last two decades, India’s economy has almost quadrupled in size, growing at an average rate of about 7% per annum and over 9% from 2005 to 2007 – Chinese rates of growth.

The key drivers of growth included a large population which created a substantial domestic market, high savings rates which financed investment and an educated, English speaking workforce which was under employed. De-regulation allowed a latent commercialism, suppressed during the license raj days, to prosper.

While the reforms of 1991 and the nation’s natural resources were crucial, India was lucky. The opening up of India coincided with the rise of business process outsourcing (“BPO”). Developed nations commenced outsourcing basic support services and information technology (“IT”) to cheaper foreign providers. The need to re-code computer software to avoid the Y2K or Millennium Bug and support the Internet boom provided a significant boost to the India IT industry.

The external environment was favourable, characterised by strong global growth underpinned by the “peace dividend” from the end of the Cold War. The rise of emerging markets, especially the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) nations, helped sustain a flow of investment into India. A weak Indian Rupee assisted growth, allowing Indian exporters to compete and encouraged foreign capital.

India also avoided the worst of the 1997/ 1998 Asian monetary crisis and the 2007/ 2008 global financial crisis. The high level of regulation of the financial system, including extensive capital controls, and domestic focus of the banking system protected the Indian economy.

The last factor which assisted growth was the large Indian Diaspora. The lost decades had resulted in a flight of human capital to developed economies. Beginning in the 1990s, there was a steady flow back of these skills, augmented by overseas education and experience, into the Indian economy.

Non-resident Indians (“NRIs”) were important in supplying capital. Indians working overseas, both in technical or more modest positions especially in the Middle East remitted more than $20 billion a year to India, the most of any country in the world. Successful expatriate Indian businessmen and professionals provided business connections which helped Indian business.

India and Indian had arrived on the global economic stage. Activist Arundhuti Roy satirised President George Bush’s favourable view of “Innians”: “…I like rish Innians…they are obedient and brainy…they provide additional brainpower to help solve problems… Innia is important as a market for US products…one billion people to exploit…” Domestic Innians now shared the success of their immigrant countrymen.


India Shining…

India’s GDP rose by 43% between 2007 and 2012, slightly less that China which increased by 56% but much fast than developed economies which grew only 2%.
Economists rushed to out do each other in spruiking the India story. Forecasts of growth rates of 8.5% per annum or even higher became commonplace. Morgan Stanley, the US investment bank, predicted that India’s growth would reach 9-10%, outpacing China’s pedestrian 8% within three to five years. In a report titled India: Better Off Than Most Others, Macquarie Capital, argued that India’s traditional weaknesses -low exports, a predominantly state-owned financial system lightly integrated to foreign markets, sluggish export growth because of bureaucracy and the large domestic agricultural sector producing only for domestic consumption- were now strengths underpinning growth.

Indian leaders moved between international forums, basking in their new found status and power. Indian businessman made trophy purchases of business overseas, financed by debt. At the World Economic Forum at Davos, representatives of the Indian government and business announced that India could grow in its sleep.
India’s economic hubris was exemplified by a marketing slogan, first popularised by the then-ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (“BJP”) for the 2004 Indian general elections – “India Shining”.

While India’s economic progress was evident, the benefits were narrowly based. A large portion of the population continued to struggle with low living standards or poverty, lacking access to basic amenities such as sufficient nutrition, clean water, sanitation as well as basic education and health services. The basis of the growth was also not balanced.

After years without a good news story, the Indian media focused on the nation’s “greatnesses”, relying on extraneous facts. The fact that the market capitalization of State Bank of India surpassed that of Citigroup was cheered. The press celebrated the first Indian edition of Harper’s Bazaar which featured a crystal-studded cover, the introduction by Rolls-Royce of its new Phantom Coupe in India and the opening of a new BMW showroom in Delhi.


Billionaires Shining…

India now had nearly 7% of the world’s 1,000 or so billionaires, despite its GDP being only 2% of world GDP. The total wealth of Indian billionaires is more than 20% of the nation’s GDP, about the same as Russia but higher than China where it was less than 3%.

Mukesh Ambani, head of Indian based petrochemical giant Reliance Industries, and the fifth richest man in the world with a net worth of around $50 billion, used his wealth to build Antilia, a $2 billion house within sight of some of Mumbai’s slums. The lavish property was dubbed India 21[SUP]st[/SUP] century Taj Mahal.

Controversial from the outset, Mukesh Ambani and his family reportedly have not moved into their new completed home, preferring to move between Antilia and their previous residence Sea Wind. The press speculated that the building did not comply with principle of Vaastu, an Indian tradition similar to Feng Shui, the ancient Chinese system of aesthetics. Antilia’s shape was supposed to move energy beneficially through the building to improve the wealth and well being of residents. But it may violate of a key principle of Vastu. The building’s Eastern side does not receive ample morning light. It is more open to the West, which exposes it to negative energy.

Hindus believe that living in a building not built according to Vastu principles brings bad luck. In recent times, Mukesh Ambani’s empire has been adversely affected by a bitter fight with his brother Anil as well as legal and regulatory problems with some of his businesses.

Like Ambani, India’s bad luck may be just beginning, as growth slows rapidly and her problems mount. Prime Minister Singh recently conceded that “it would be wrong to conclude that India is now unshakeably set on a process of rapid growth.” It was a contrast to Home Minister P. Chidambaram earlier optimism: “Thanks to our domestic consumption and demand, India and a handful of other countries, despite world gloom, are a shining example of a resilient economy.”



 
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AsifAmeer

Siasat.pk - Blogger
The Great Pretender–India’s Economic Past and Future:

Part 2, A Sea of Troubles


In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, optimists hoped that the BRIC (Brazil Russia India China) would drive the global economic engine. But China’s economic growth has slowed to its lowest rate in three years. Brazil’s economic growth has fallen from around 7.5% to under 3%. Russia’s economy is heavily dependent on oil and energy prices. India also has stalled. This 3-part paper looks at the development and future trajectory of the “I” in the “BRIC”. The second part looks at the India’s current problems.


In late 2011, the Indian government’s 12th five-year plan forecast growth of 9% between 2012 and 2017. By early 2012, India’s growth had slowed to around 6%, high by the standards of developed countries but well below the levels required to maintain economic momentum and improve the living standards of its citizens.


Elements of the India Shining story remain intact –the demographics of a youthful population, the large domestic demand base and the high savings rate. Increasingly, India’s problems – poor public finances, weak international position, structurally flawed businesses, poor infrastructure, corruption and political atrophy- threaten to overwhelm its future prospects.




Public Troubles…


In recent years, India has consistently run a public sector deficit of 9-10% of GDP, including the state governments and off-balance-sheet items.


Confronted with the global financial crisis and the additional complication of a poor monsoon, India implemented successive aggressive stimulus packages from 2008 onwards to restore growth. The predictable result was an increase in the central government’s fiscal deficit from 2.6% of GDP in 2007/2008 to its current level of over 6.5%. If the individual states are included, the deficit jumps to around 10%.


The problem of large budget deficits is compounded by one of the major causes – poorly targeted subsidies for fertiliser, food and petroleum which may amount to as much as 9% of GDP.


In March 2012, India brought down a budget forecasting a fiscal deficit of 5.9%, well above its previous fiscal deficit target of 4.6%. The budget did not engender confidence that India was steering a credible fiscal course, bringing its public spending under control.


Prior to the budget, Prime Minister Singh announced a separate stimulus package including $35 billion of public sector investment. The spending was to be financed by forcing state-owned companies such as Coal India and the Oil and Natural Gas Corporation to invest existing surplus cash


The use of additional fiscal stimulus to restore growth is questionable. India’s strong rate of recent growth (an average rate of 14% between 2004-05 and 2009-10) made large deficits, in the order of 10 % of GDP, relatively sustainable. Slowing growth will increasingly constrain India’s ability to run continuing large deficits.


Indian government’s debt is around 70% of GDP. As its debt is denominated in Rupees and sold domestically, India faces no immediate financing difficulty. Instead, the government’s heavy borrowing requirements crowds out private business.


Indian banks are significant purchasers of government bonds. The banks, generally majority state owned, are also forced to lend to Indian state enterprises. This limits the supply of credit to Indian businesses that are forced to borrow overseas, exposing them to currency risk. Given India’s deteriorating external position, the foreign debt is becoming increasingly problematic.




Foreign Troubles…


India is running a current account deficit of over 3% of GDP trending higher, towards 4%. This is only slightly behind the US and amongst the highest in the G-20.


Exports have slowed as a result of weakness in India’s trading partners. At the same time, imports, a large proportion of which are non-discretionary purchases of commodities and oil, have increased. India imports around 75% of its crude oil from overseas. Higher oil prices combined with increasing political risk in the Middle East increases the pressure on India’s external position.


Over the last 2-3 years, India has financed this deficit through foreign investment, attracted by the country’s strong growth, rising equity markets and future prospects. India’s deteriorating outlook – slowing growth, large budget, large trade deficits and weak equity performance in 2011 – has reduced the flow of investment. India is also increasingly reliant on short term capital flows which are going into money markets rather than long term equity investments, increasing the risk of instability.


Higher commodity prices, wage rises and domestic capacity constraints have kept inflation high forcing the RBI to keep monetary policy tight and interest rates high. However, increasingly, the authorities face a policy dilemma. Lower rates may assist growth and boost slowing demand but are inconsistent with stability of prices and the Rupee, especially with inflation high and pressure on the currency.


India’s weak external position has manifested itself in the volatility of the Rupee, which was one of the worst performers amongst Asian currencies in 2011. Indian businesses, which have unhedged foreign currency borrowings, have incurred significant losses as the value of their debt rises as the Rupee falls.


The problems are compounded by the fact that Indian companies face large debt maturities in the coming year. The ability to refinance the debt coming due remains an issue in an environment of a weakening economy as well weaker company outlook.


European banks have reduced their lending in Asia, choosing to focus on home markets in Europe. In an interesting development, Reliance Communications was forced to turn to Chinese banks for finance. The transaction was conditional on the purchase of equipment from China.


Refinancing issues are also complicated by the fact that the some of the debt is in the form of foreign currency convertible bonds (“FCB”s) designed to convert into the issuer’s shares rather than be repaid at maturity. Indian companies have over $5 billion of convertible bonds maturing in the current year.


In an environment of booming stock markets between 2005 and 2008, FCBs provided companies with low cost debt. However, the toxic combination of falls in share prices and a fall in the value of the Rupee (in which the shares are denominated) means that the FCBs will not convert and need to be repaid. The repayment in foreign currency will crystallise large currency losses. In addition, refinancing the FCBs will result in much higher borrowing costs, which will significantly affect the profitability of Indian corporations.


The refinancing issue poses a problem for the RBI. India has US$250-300 billion in currency reserves (enough for around 7 months of imports). Foreign debts that must be repaid in the current year are around 40-45% of this amount, which if deducted highlights the increasing weakness in India’s external position.


In an effort to manage the problems, India has eased the regulations on foreign lending to India hoping to attract investment.




Bank Troubles…


Slowing growth, tighter credit and other economic problems have increased corporate defaults to the highest level in 10 years resulting in bad loans. Non performing loans are now around 2.5-3.00% of bank assets. Analysts estimate that the major banks have around $25 billion in bad loans, an amount which is increasing.


The problem is greatest for government owned banks, which constitute 75% of the banking system. The bad loans are concentrated in sectors such as power, aviation, infrastructure, real estate and telecommunications.


The common element is that these industries are characterised by government involvement and which have suffered from erratic government policy or wholesale interference. In electricity, state owned utilities have accumulated losses of $14 billion, in part because low government mandated rates dictated by political considerations do not cover the cost of generation.


Two of India’s biggest airlines, the State owned Air India and the privately held Kingfisher Airline, are now struggling to pay employees as they struggle under large debt burdens.


The Indian government has already moved to recapitalise State owned banks to ensure their capital position. In the process, the budget deficit and the government borrowing requirements have come under increasing pressure.




The Victor Kiam Syndrome …


Foreign commentators see India’s growth as being driven by tens or hundreds of millions of individual entrepreneurs, rather than the state as in China. They praise India’s export of services rather than cheap manufacture products. Foreigners also admire India’s business innovation, mostly notably the “frugal innovators” that have introduced cheap “nano” mini cars and inexpensive tablet computers.


The reality is more nuanced. India continues to be dominated by state owned business and the large oligarchic firms, which existed prior to economic liberalisation. Studies have found the economy continues to be dominated by an oligopoly of incumbents, which have maintained or increased their positions.


India’s exports are diversified—both geographically and in terms of the products it sells. But export oriented firms are affected by the economic weaknesses in their major trading partners. With few exceptions, they have not moved up the value chain, continuing to provide the new economy version of cheap manual labour. Innovation remains weak relative to international market leaders.


Export oriented firms face challenges from rising labour costs, as a result of the shortage of skilled workers. In some areas, cost pressures are forcing these firms to relocate overseas, reversing one of the trends that underpinned growth.


Both international and domestic businesses are restricted by India’s infrastructure weaknesses. Cost structures are increased by the need by businesses to invest in power generators (to counteract inconsistent power supply), workforce training (to overcome staff shortages) and even transport and housing infrastructure for their workers.


Domestic firms also continue to face inconsistent and frequently dysfunctional government regulation and competition.


The airline industry provides a case in point. The weaknesses of Air India, the government owned nation carrier, allowed a number of private carriers to prosper – Jet Airways, Kingfisher, Spice Jet etc.


In recent years, a government recapitalised Air India has added new planes, competing vigorously, to regain lost market share. The combination of a government supported competitor, higher fuel prices and poor management has caused the private airlines to stumble. One private carrier – Kingfisher – is now struggling to pay employees and has been forced to cut flights. In the absence of a substantial new capital injection, Kingfisher’s future is uncertain. Few if any airlines are now profitable and shareholders, lenders and the government are at risk of losing billions of dollars.


Domestic difficulties, in part, have encouraged some firms to expand internationally – Tata Motors purchased Jaguar Land Rover; Tata Steel bought Corus; Mittal Steel bought Arcelor; Bharti Airtel bough Zain Africa. The reverse colonialism has encouraged jingoistic, patriotic breast beating. But the commercial logic of some of the transactions is highly questionable. Funded by large amount of debt, the acquisitions have performed poorly financially. Their long term prospects are uncertain.


The Tata CEO’s personal like of jaguars prompted comparison with the famed Victor Kiam who liked Remington razors so much he bought the company.


There remain governance issues at many Indian companies, highlighted by the fraud at Hyderabad-based Satyam, at the time one of the top five IT outsourcing companies.



We Have No Infrastructure Today…


India is plagued by inadequate infrastructure. In critical sectors like power, transport and utilities, there are significant shortages. Poor investment and slow government decision making has hindered development.


Political pressure to keep utility costs low has impeded investment. In the electricity sector, state-owned utilities that purchase power from producers and sell to residential users have incurred large losses. State governments are unwilling to raise retail consumer rates despite increases in the price that power producers charge the utilities.


Electricity generators cannot obtain sufficient coal from the state-owned mining monopoly Coal India, which has been unable to increase production to match the demands of new power plants. Some electricity producers have been forced to invest overseas to assure access to coal.


Attempts to increase rail ticket prices have failed. The Railways Minister’s own party opposed the proposal and demanded he be removed from his job.


Increasingly, the structural problems and poor history of projects has made foreign investors cautious, creating a shortage of foreign capital for investment in infrastructure.


While its workforce is young and growing, there is a shortage of skills.


In a dysfunctional public education system 40% of student do not complete school. The workforce is 40% illiterate. India’s overall adult literacy rate is 66% compared to 93% for China.


Some universities, especially the 16 Indian Institutes of Technology, are world class. But their limited capacity means that are significant shortages. Some estimates forecast a shortage of 200,000 engineers, 400,000 other graduates and 150,000 vocationally trained workers, such as builders, electricians and plumbers, in the coming years. In contrast, there are 60-100 million underemployed or surplus low skilled workers in agriculture.


There is concern that universities graduates are good mainly at cramming to pass examinations. Employers have to invest heavily to make them “job ready”. Graduates who travel overseas for foreign qualifications frequently prefer to stay and work overseas where the rewards are greater.


The shortage has led to large increases in salaries for skilled workers. There are also cultural issues. An Indian magazine Business Today published a story entitled Brats at Work, complaining about the attitude of young workers.


Higher wages increase the cost of Indian businesses making them internationally less competitive and fuelling domestic inflation. The shortage of skilled workers also makes it harder to improve infrastructure gap. The problems surrounding the New Delhi Commonwealth Games highlighted both the infrastructure and skills shortages.


The real question is whether India has the collective will and ability to overcome its “sea of troubles”.

 
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Unicorn

Banned
@AsifAmeer , he is right on. Its a problem in every democracy when the economic and monetary policies are based on voter's demand not addressing the realities. The situation only gets worse in countries like India when incompetency , corruption and political dechebaggary thrown in the mix.
 

Unicorn

Banned
[MENTION=24375]AsifAmeer[/MENTION] , just for curiosity how many people you come across who are pound fool and penny wise?. I come across quite a significant percentage of these people specially when I had my own business. What is your experience with such people?
 

AsifAmeer

Siasat.pk - Blogger
The Great Pretender–India’s Economic Past and Future:

Part 3, Political Atrophy

http://www.economonitor.com/blog/20...mic-past-and-future-part-3-political-atrophy/

In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, optimists hoped that the BRIC (Brazil Russia India China) would drive the global economic engine. But China’s economic growth has slowed to its lowest rate in three years. Brazil’s economic growth has fallen from around 7.5% to under 3%. Russia’s economy is heavily dependent on oil and energy prices. India also has stalled. This 3-part paper looks at the development and future trajectory of the “I” in the “BRIC”. The third part looks at the India’s inability to confront its current problems.


India’s growth has slowed to around 6%, high by the standards of developed countries but well below the levels required to maintain economic momentum and improve the living standards of its citizens. The demographics of a youthful population, the large domestic demand base and the high savings rate all remain positive. But increasingly, corruption and political atrophy threaten to overwhelm its future prospects.



Corruption Capital …

Petty corruption by poorly paid local officials has been common in India for decades. The real problem is a deep-seated and endemic corruption on a large scale, highlighted by scandals surrounding the issue of telecommunication licenses and also sales of coal assets.

A 9-month investigation by the auditor and Central Bureau of Investigation found that the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology sold licences for the use of spectrum for mobile telephony bandwidth at below market prices to telecoms companies in 2008. The report found that 85 of the 122 licenses were granted to companies that “suppressed facts, disclosed incomplete information and submitted fictitious documents.” The sale cost the Indian government and citizens lost revenues of around US$39 billion.

More recently, a draft report by the auditor accused the government of selling coal assets to major Indian industrial corporations at below market prices, resulting in a loss of (up to) $210 billion in lost revenues. There are even accusations of manipulation of the auction of licenses in the new Indian Premier league, a T20 cricket competition.

Commentators now compare some Indian businessmen to 19th-century American robber-barons.

Using corrupt means to access power and acquire influence over politicians, businesses have advanced their interest in several areas. They have secured rich natural resources, especially land and minerals. They have ensured a favourable regulatory framework and restricted competition, especially foreign competition, where possible. The unauthorised biography of Dhirubhai Ambani, the founder of the Reliance Empire now split between his sons, euphemistically notes his skill at “managing the environment”.

The problem involves both businesses and politicians. Historian Ramachandra Guha tells the story of a burglary of a prominent Indian Politician which only yielded the miscreant a gold sovereign and Rupees 800 (about US$ 20). Today, the haul might be better.

The retired head of India’s anti-corruption watchdog stated that as much as 30% of his compatriots were corrupt. Favours, bribes and even shares of business are now commonly demanded in return for assistance in securing contracts.

A 2009 Newsweek article The House in Ill Repute recorded the history of some members of the Indian Lok Sabha, the lower house of parliament. Under new laws pushed through by a group of college professors after years of fierce resistance from dozens of political parties, candidates for the Lok Sabha were required to disclose their assets and criminal records. The disclosures recorded that 128 of the 543 winners had faced criminal charges, including 84 cases of murder, 17 cases of robbery and 28 cases of theft and extortion. One member faced 17 separate murder charges. As Indian law only bars convicted criminals but not alleged criminals from running for or holding office, even convicted criminals can continue to hold political office pending the hearing of appeals, a process that can take up to 25 years in India.



Insecure India …

India’s economic challenges are compounded by internal and external insecurity.

In the title of his 1990 book A Million Mutinies, writer V.S. Naipaul pithily captured India’s internal political disputes. Today, about a third to a half of India is affected by the Naxalites, a violent Maoist insurgency which has been active for over the 50 years. Active in remote forested areas which are coincidentally rich in mineral resources, the movement has prevented development and also tied up substantial government resources.

More peaceful separatist movements abound in many parts of India, with ethnically distinct groups seeking their own separate State. Over the last 30 years, many Indian states have been sub-divided to accommodate these movements at great national expense.

The threat of religious conflict between Hindus and Muslims is ever present. The Chief Minister of Gujarat, frequently touted as a candidate for future Prime Minister, is unwelcome in many countries that refuse to grant him a visa because of his alleged involvement in sectarian violence.

Ongoing border disputes with Pakistan and China and the instability of AfPak (Afghanistan and Pakistan) dictates large defence expenditure. This is compounded by regional competition with China for influence requiring the capability to project military power into the Indian Ocean and also South East Asia.

In 2012, Indian defence spending is forecast to be US$41 billion, around 1.9% of GDP or the 9[SUP]th[/SUP] highest in the world. Financing this spending diverts resources away from other parts of the economy.


Political Atrophy…

Political paralysis is a major impediment to economic development. Successive governments of every political persuasion have failed to undertake meaningful reforms, necessary to foster growth, employment and development.

Required changes in land and property laws have not been made. Problems in acquiring land are a factor in 70% of delayed infrastructure projects. The land acquisition process under a 19[SUP]th[/SUP] century law requires changes, which remain unlegislated almost 3 years after amendments were proposed.

Reform of tax laws, including introduction of a direct sales tax correcting cumbersome difference between individual states, have not been completed. Changes to mining and mineral development regulations to allow proper, environmentally controlled exploitation of India’s mineral wealth have not been made.

Other crucial areas remains unaddressed – rationalising unwieldy and economically distorted subsidies, implementing economic pricing of utilities, promoting foreign investment in key sectors or reforming agriculture, especially the wasteful and inefficient logistics system for transporting produce to market. Reform of labour markets and privatisation of key sectors has not been progressed.

Dealing with corruption and reforming government process for the grant of licenses or property rights also remains incomplete.

India’s political system is an obstacle to change. Complex coalition governments are a barrier to decisive action. The current government failed to implement its plans to allow limited entry of foreign retailers as a result of protests from its own coalition partners as well as the opposition. The government also failed to get a key anti-corruption bill through parliament.

The current governing Congress led coalition and the BJP led opposition is weak, both crippled by corruption scandals. All parties are dominated by political monarchies (such as the Nehru-Ghandi dynasty) or by geriatric politicians who cannot or will not embrace change.

India’s fabled democracy is an increasingly ossified domain, where a complete inability to make hard decisions or undertake reforms makes government futile if profitable for some.


The Great Pretender…

In good times, Indian economic weaknesses were covered by moments of positive actions and good luck. But the economy faces increasingly difficult times ahead as the luck has run out.

Indian disappointing response to the challenges is to disavow the problem or to look for short cuts. The overall tendency is for “spin”, ignoring the fundamental failures. The country seems unable to face the truth and undertake fundamental long term changes.

In the 1980s, Indian sociologist Ashis Nandy observed that “in India the choice could never be between chaos and stability, but between manageable and unmanageable chaos”. The observation is relevant today as India deteriorates through its failure to carry through crucial reforms exacerbated by corruption.
Without urgent changes, India may never be able to live up to its promise, remaining always the Great Pretender.




 

AsifAmeer

Siasat.pk - Blogger
I have loads of family members who are "pound fool but penny wise!"

They will happily give up $200k on a property deal gone sour but will save $1.15 on a sh!tty tasting ketchup!

@AsifAmeer , just for curiosity how many people you come across who are pound fool and penny wise?. I come across quite a significant percentage of these people specially when I had my own business. What is your experience with such people?
 

Unicorn

Banned
I have loads of family members who are "pound fool but penny wise!"

They will happily give up $200k on a property deal gone sour but will save $1.15 on a sh!tty tasting ketchup!

There are a lot of people like that. I knew one who would't buy a $4.00 transmission oill when it was low but paid over $2000 for transmission.
 

AsifAmeer

Siasat.pk - Blogger
Imagine if bad decisions are made on a personal scale, why wouldnt bad decisions be made on a Govt level.. just exponentially high magnitudes!

There are a lot of people like that. I knew one who would't buy a $4.00 transmission oill when it was low but paid over $2000 for transmission.
 

gazoomartian

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
I have loads of family members who are "pound fool but penny wise!"

They will happily give up $200k on a property deal gone sour but will save $1.15 on a sh!tty tasting ketchup!

I know some folks who are just FOOL, pound or not [hilar]

Present Indians company included of course :lol:
 

gazoomartian

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
Chief I respect your age, not you particularly.

Show some God dam'ned decency.

Sorry, no decency for terrorist Indians. You don't have to read my posts if the offend you.

I have lost my high school buddies, cousins sisters, their sisters were raped, killed, and kidnapped. Indians and mukti bahini cut off breast of a teen age girl, an old man died helpless on street because they slashed tummy on side and butchered his internal organs. These are only what I have witnessed, 1000's of more atrocities.

And you expect me to be decent with these f*** terrorists Indians? I wish I could nuke new delhi for what they have done to us in East Pakistan. We shall pay back soon InshaAllah starting from Skih's homeland, separating north east India and Bihar. They will be sorry they ever lay hands on my land.

InshaAllah, Pakistan is going thru the process of tatheer, we shall come out of it as a winner

You should block me if my attack on Indians offend you.


By the way, I do not need your respect, or any body else for that matter.
 
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AsifAmeer

Siasat.pk - Blogger
I know you dont need my respect. But you do need your own self respect.

I am not defending indians here but it was your age and the wisdom that comes with it, thats what i was trying to defend here.


Sorry, no decency for terrorist Indians. You don't have to read my posts if the offend you.

I have lost my high school buddies, cousins sisters, their sisters were raped, killed, and kidnapped. Indians and mukti bahini cut off breast of a teen age girl, an old man died helpless on street because they slashed tummy on side and butchered his internal organs. These are only what I have witnessed, 1000's of more atrocities.

And you expect me to be decent with these f*** terrorists Indians? I wish I could nuke new delhi for what they have done to us in East Pakistan. We shall pay back soon InshaAllah starting from Skih's homeland, separating north east India and Bihar. They will be sorry they ever lay hands on my land.

InshaAllah, Pakistan is going thru the process of tatheer, we shall come out of it as a winner

You should block me if my attack on Indians offend you.


By the way, I do not need your respect, or any body else for that matter.
 

Imranpak

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
A tablespoon of honey tastes sweet in a cup of tea not an ocean of water! Moral being that there are certain good things happening in India but are heavily outweighed by all the poverty and deprivation.

Some investment and glamorous call centres can't hide the desperation seen on the streets of their major cities.
 
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