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India's Woes Foretell 'Chaos and Violence'

India's Woes Foretell 'Chaos and Violence'

Jayati Ghosh, 58, is an economist specializing in globalization and international finance. She teaches at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi and acts as an advisor to the Indian government. She also recently co-authored a book titled "Economic Reform Now: A Global Manifesto to Rescue Our Sinking Economies."

SPIEGEL: Ms. Ghosh, when the global financial crisis broke out in 2008, the demise of the West seemed to be sealed. Now, however, China is suffering from a banking crisis, and in India the situation is even more dramatic. Economic growth has almost halved, and panicking investors are abandoning the rupee. Is the Asian Era over before it has even begun?
Ghosh: Our two countries have big problems, but the situation is completely different. China is fundamentally strong; it has a huge trade surplus. India, however, suffers from a huge current account deficit, which we are trying to partly fill with hot money, or speculative investment, from abroad. China first and foremost has to control its illegal shadow banks, but that is not at all comparable to the mess that we are now facing in India.
SPIEGEL: Overall, money inflows into emerging markets are beginning to slow, and investors are also reacting to the possibility raised by US Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke of an end to quantitative easing.

Ghosh: Certainly, countries like India and Brazil have a problem if suddenly less hot money flows in. But our government in particular cannot simply put the blame for the fall of the rupee on external factors like Bernanke. This can only explain to a small extent why the rupee is now one of the worst performing currencies among developing countries.

SPIEGEL: How threatening do you think the present rupee crisis is? Does the government have the situation under control?

Ghosh: Our government reacts with panic measures. For example, it desperately attempted to attract more capital into the country by easing rules for external commercial borrowing. This, however, only worsens the structural causes of the rupee crisis. Our much vaunted economic boom was essentially a debt-driven consumption spree, financed by short term capital inflows. Those who profited were mostly construction companies and the real estate sector. India's boom was also peculiar in that it did not generate any new jobs, but instead deepened the gap between rich and poor.

SPIEGEL: China also suffers from an inflated real estate sector, when its state-sponsored capitalist sytem artificially pumped up the economy after the Lehmann crisis of 2008. Is that now coming back to haunt China?

Ghosh: I am fundamentally in favor of a bigger role for the state in order to direct investments and control banks. However in China, as in the rest of Asia, a big real estate bubble was created. Instead, China should have strengthened domestic consumption in order to free itself from the dependence on exports.

SPIEGEL: Does this mean that the decoupling of Asia from the West -- which experts have been predicting for a long time -- is moving further into the future?

Ghosh: China won't be able to break away from the West for a long time. And since the rest of Asia depends on China -- it's the biggest trade partner for many -- they also cannot break away. To be sure, China strives for a leading global role. But for the time being, the weight of traditional industrialized nations is still too strong.

SPIEGEL: Indeed, parts of the West look surprisingly strong just now: Innovations like the iPhone are being created above all in the United States.

Ghosh: If I look at the 21st century I see a huge imbalance. The most important economic currents flow from South to North: the trade in ever-cheaper products which the emerging markets produce; the capital investments -- because these countries invest their surpluses in US bonds; the cheap labor which they export, and with which they help solve the problems of those aging societies. But why does the North still dominate? Because it still invests a lot of money into research and development, and it controls intellectual property.

SPIEGEL: India in particular is falling behind in the race to catch up to industrialization. Why is it so much more difficult for your country than for China to escape poverty?

Ghosh: We can't manage the simplest things, because our starting point was completely different. When China began its reform process at the end of the 1970s, almost everybody there already had enough to eat. There were roads in almost every village, and there was medical care. In China, society was by and large equal. In contrast, a third of Indians still don't have electricity. We fight against the legacy of a caste system which condones inequality and discrimination. India's elites put up with conditions which are extremely damaging.

SPIEGEL: So you wouldn't blame democracy for India's problems? In a democracy, you can't simply order progress to happen as you can in communist China.

Ghosh: The problem is the nature of our democracy, which developed on the basis of a strictly hierarchical society. We actually need more democracy. Only democracy can create the necessary social pressure to eliminate crass injustices.

SPIEGEL: Could India's chronic corruption problem then also be overcome?

Ghosh: Corruption is a question of development. The more developed a society is, the less it will tolerate corruption.

SPIEGEL: In contrast to China, India does not owe its economic miracle to industrial mass production. India started from above, as it were, with software companies that employ well-educated, English-speaking programmers. Now, however, many of those experts are becoming redundant because computers can do their work faster and cheaper. Does India need a new development model?

Ghosh: Many Indians believed we could become a service economy straight away and leapfrog industrialization. But that's ridiculous, it doesn't work. Even now, the IT sector only employs around 2.5 million people in our country -- compared to a working population of almost 500 million. We can't avoid the hard task of industrializing our country from the bottom up. Almost 60 percent of our population are younger than thirty; these people need jobs. We are sitting on a ticking time bomb.

SPIEGEL: Your government promises to open up the country further for big foreign corporations like Wal-Mart and Ikea. Is this really the way to create enough new jobs?

Ghosh: These measures only destroy jobs. Everybody knows that retail multinationals employ much fewer people per product and per turnover than the small shops that dominate in India. Instead, we have to invest in the basics, in infrastructure: A road to every village. Water, electricity and housing for everyone. Access to bank credit for everyone -- not just for rich entrepreneurs. We have to concentrate on things that create jobs. Then India's economy will grow on its own.

SPIEGEL: Ahead of the parliamentary election next year, nobody believes the government has the courage to reform. What happens if your country falls even further behind in the process of catching up?

Ghosh: Then we will face political and social chaos on a mass scale, and an increase in violence against women, as we are already seeing.
SPIEGEL: So the shockingly high number of rapes in India has economic causes?

Ghosh: Yes, and the degree of viciousness has gone up. Many unemployed young men see no future for themselves. They hang around on the streets, they see how others are enjoying their wealth, and that drives them mad. Then they go out and rape women, or vent their frustration at Muslims or members of lower castes. We will see much more of this kind of violence. It really scares me.

Interview conducted by Wieland Wagner
 
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Rupee rallies on oil window, back at 66 per dollar level - Hindustan Times

The rupee rallied sharply to sub 67 per dollar levels on Thursday after the central bank said it would supply dollars to oil companies through a separate window in its latest attempt to shore up the currency.

The partially convertible rupee was trading at 66.90/91 per dollar at 9:10am, 2.8% stronger than its close of 68.80/81 on Wednesday, when it hit a record low of 68.85.

The benchmark 10-year bond yield also gained tracking the rupee, with the yield falling as much as 21 basis points to 8.75%.
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Nifty and Sensex too saw green after two days of crisis as the BSE opened around 1.2% higher and NSE opened 1% higher.

The improvement in rupee's levels comes on global cues as most Asian markets saw a mild bounce-back on Thursday.

Tokyo rose 0.48% by the break, Hong Kong added 0.58%, Shanghai gained 0.42% and Seoul rallied 1.25% but Sydney shed 0.28%.

Further hints about the US not being keen on striking Syria might also prove to be a source of positivity.

The expected military strike on Syria by the US had caused a scare of a possible surge in the already high in crude oil prices.

The finance ministry had on Wednesday described the sharp fall in the value of the rupee as a reflection of "irrational sentiment" and said there was no need for panic.

"This is an irrational sentiment. It will correct itself. It is important to stay on the course. There is no need to panic," economic affairs secretary Arvind Mayaram told reporters in New Delhi.

Seeking to assure investors, Mayaram said the current account deficit (CAD) in 2013-14 will be much lower than expected.

"CAD will be much lower than expected. We have already seen some moderation in CAD," he said.

CAD, which is the difference between the inflow and outflow of foreign exchange, hit a record high of $88.2 billion in 2012-13. The government expects to bring it down to USD 70 billion in the current fiscal.

Mayaram further said the government does not plan to ban derivatives trading in the currency market, a move that experts feel could help in curbing speculation.
 
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This perverse rage against the poor - The Hindu

Updated: August 30, 2013 00:08 IST
This perverse rage against the poor

With the economic boom petering out, those who benefitted from it are angry with the government for the Food Security Bill because it is paying attention to the needs of the underprivileged for a change

This week’s received wisdom insists that the Indian economy has irretrievably collapsed because on Monday, the Lok Sabha passed the National Food Security Bill (NFSB). The Hindu Business Line headline (Aug.28, page 1) said it all: “Re, Sensex sink on fears Food Bill will feed deficit.” The subtext of the lament appears to be that the rupee decline was the market’s way of registering a pointed disapproval of the food security initiative.

The Schadenfreude-wallahs are as happy as are the market-reformers that the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) leadership has been fixed so gloriously for venturing into a “populist” course of action. The bandwagon routine has acquired a momentum of its own; even Hindi and other vernacular newspapers have allowed themselves to be mesmerised by the crisis-mongering on television. This, though, is no time to panic. This is the time to strike a balance between short-term difficulty and long-term promises and commitments.

What wrong signals?

Once every few decades comes a moment in a Republic’s life when a few fundamental commitments have to be renewed — or rejected. This is one such week, a time to test our core beliefs. It is also the time to ask a fundamental question: since when in this country has a veto been ceded to the markets and its manipulators, at home and abroad, to decide the issues of equity, social justice and economic fairness?

There is something inherently perverse in the suggestion that this much-needed welfare measure would send out the “wrong” signals. Pray to whom? Those half-a-dozen professional financial manipulators in London?

Indeed, economists can always be relied upon to argue that there is always a better way to do anything. Some are competing among themselves to declare that this food security initiative will neither work, nor fetch any votes for the ruling party.

Let us make no mistake. Beyond all these sophisticated arguments is a certain class prejudice, resentful that so many resources are being “wasted” for the poor and other socially disadvantaged people, that in this age of “reforms,” political considerations and calculations are being allowed to determine the allocation of societal resources.

This misses the very essence of the concept of political legitimacy in a democratic arrangement. A democracy survives and prospers only when every stakeholder gets an abiding sense of participation, partnership and entitlement. We often seem to keep forgetting that politics is all about who gets what at whose expense.

During these last five years, at least for most of the time, the corporates and their policy preferences have been accorded unprecedented acceptance. The time is ripe to strike a new balance. And the NFSB does just that.

Reform by stealth

If we are honest with ourselves, we will have no difficulty in acknowledging that for 20 years, economic reforms have been operationalised without a political mandate. Not until recently when the Congress party held a public meeting to rally opinion behind the Manmohan Singh government’s FDI policy, did any political party have the courage to proclaim openly and boldly its commitment to “economic reforms.”

Yet, the “reforms” have been routinely and regularly proclaimed to be “irreversible,” irrespective of the political colour of the government in New Delhi. The process has well been summed up in that evocative phrase, “reform by stealth.”

So now, when we are confronted with a veritable economic meltdown, we are ill-equipped to attend to the more serious and more debilitating crisis of our democratic project running out of its popular legitimacy. India’s democratic arrangements no longer appear to have the requisite social and political sanctions behind them. And we are unable to deal adequately with the systemic overload because our public discourse has been hijacked by a self-serving advocacy crowd and by a professionally disoriented media.

For example, a year ago there was carping all around that the crony capitalists and the corrupt politicians were robbing the nation of its wealth, and we staged massive spectacles of resentment at Jantar Mantar; now, a year later, we are ranting and raving that we are not listening to or heeding those who rig the stock markets.

If shouting and screaming every evening could produce solutions to difficult and complex problems, India would have been the most efficacious and working corner of planet Earth. Despite the obvious disapproval of the shouting class, the UPA leadership has gone ahead with the Food Security Bill. Hence, the exaggerated anger.

As social philosopher Roberto Mangabeira Unger points out, a peaceful social order is in itself not enough; “ ociety must be set up in a manner capable of justification in the yes of each of its members.” In political economy terms, each section of society, and every stakeholder gets to determine: what is in it for me?

The Democratic Project is a social compact, an indefinable construct, but nonetheless one that hinges on a promise of a fair deal for all. The poor are asking this question with greater urgency — and in the Maoist-strongholds with arms and blood — as decades of “economic growth” have produced new inequities and disparities.

Rather than wait for the next round of the “Maoist” violence to jerk us back to harsh realities, what the Food law does is that at one stroke, it sends out a message that the Indian state has not turned its back on the poor, and that the have-nots continue to have a claim on the collective resources, and that they have not been left to their own devices or to the market’s curative potency.

This message has to be understood and appreciated in the context of the growing preference in some quarters for authoritarian solutions — throw out the encumbering paraphernalia of social equity or fairness, and let the floodgates of enterprise and business acumen be thrown wide open.

Resenting interventionism

A decade of economic prosperity has allowed millions and millions of middle-class families to realise their upwardly revised aspirations and life experiences; at the same time, the UPA saw to it that the welfare state kept expanding the “social agenda,” providing a safety net against the vagaries of the market.

Now, the good days have seemingly come to an end, and there is anger that the state remains equally mindful of the welfare poor. We all thought that the poor have been disappeared from the policy drawing room; and suddenly, they are back with almost a veto. The narrative-controllers resent that. Just when they thought they had successfully defanged the Indian state of its interventionist impulses, here comes the Food Security Bill.

The bill can be seen as the other side of the “stimulus” coin. The 2008-2009 stimulus was used by the super-rich to buy real estate in London and other European cities. At that time, no one seemed to find anything inherently wrong at this massive, disproportionate allocation of resources for so few.

None of it was invested here to create jobs; instead, the super-rich petulantly proclaimed that the government was not sufficiently attentive to their “sentiment” and hence they would take their ball (Indian savings and taxpayers) and play in other economies. No one complained; instead, the government was blamed for the corporate sector’s misplaced priorities.

If subsidised food can reduce the food spending of the poor, and place some surplus money in their hands, which would then be spent in India, that may end up stimulating domestic consumer demand. It would be a kind of stimulus lite, for the poor.

A ruling party in India is called upon to fulfil its basic obligation to keep intact the democratic credentials of the “system.” The food security legislation is a partial response to that obligation and must be applauded.

(Harish Khare is a senior journalist, political analyst and former media adviser to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. He is currently a Jawaharlal Nehru Fellow.)
 
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I am one to support India's Parliament for passing the National Food Security Bill (NFSB) that will benefit Indian poor and the country itself. The bill has a profound impact on the society as well as politics. It will save the poor and break down the unity of and appeal of the Maobadi communists. Does it matter if INR goes down to even 75 if the poor survive the harsh near future.
 
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I am one to support India's Parliament for passing the National Food Security Bill (NFSB) that will benefit Indian poor and the country itself. The bill has a profound impact on the society as well as politics. It will save the poor and break down the unity of and appeal of the Maobadi communists. Does it matter if INR goes down to even 75 if the poor survive the harsh near future.

when you receive everything for free, then why work ? FSB is a bill aimed at keeping the poor people poor .. You know what happens to a society when they don't have to work for a living ? yea... get drunk / rape / play cards
 
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when you receive everything for free, then why work ? FSB is a bill aimed at keeping the poor people poor .. You know what happens to a society when they don't have to work for a living ? yea... get drunk / rape / play cards

You are right up to a certain extent. But, with no job security or unemployment benefits how do you expect the poor to survive? I do not think only a 5 kg allotment of cheap rice will encourage people to idle in the houses. They need other amenities, too, that need cash money. So, poor people will work. Another essay below on food security.
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http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...er-of-poor/article5071963.ece?ref=relatedNews

‘Food security bill to cover about three times the number of poor’

The food security programme is not restricted to the poor and the population covered by it is about three times the number of people below the poverty line, Parliament was told on Thursday.

“The government has decided to cover 67 per cent of the population under Food Security Act. The proposed coverage is not restricted to the poor only. As per Planning Commission estimates, 21.9 per cent of the people lived below the poverty line in 2011-12.

“Therefore, the population covered by food security is approximately three times the number of poor,” Minister of State for Planning Rajeev Shukla said in a written reply in the Rajya Sabha.

Earlier this week, the Food Security Bill was passed by the Lok Sabha. It aims to provide cheap food grains to 82 crore people in the country, ushering in the biggest programme in the world to fight hunger.

The Ordinance will guarantee 5 kg of rice, wheat and coarse cereals per month per person at a fixed price of Rs. 3, Rs. 2 and Re 1, respectively.

The Minister said that as per the latest data, poverty in India had been reduced to 21.9 per cent in 2011-12.

“For the year 2011-12, the poverty line at all India level has been estimated as Monthly Per—capita Consumption Expenditure of Rs. 816 for rural and Rs. 1,000 for urban areas.”

In reply to a separate question, Mr. Shukla said scheduled castes (SCs) and scheduled tribes (STs) accounted for 36 per cent of the total population living below poverty line in 2009-10.

He further said that the working group, constituted for the empowerment of SCs and STs and other backward castes (OBCs) for the 12th Plan (2012-17), has recommended a number of measures for the upliftment of these communities.

Keywords: Food security bill 2013, subsidies food grains scheme, food grain prices, Food Bill Ordinance, Rajeev Shukla, population below poverty line
 
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You are right up to a certain extent. But, with no job security or unemployment benefits how do you expect the poor to survive? I do not think only a 5 kg allotment of cheap rice will not encourage people to idle in the houses. They need other amenities, too, that need cash money. So, poor people will work.

there are too many....these things have been tried since independence half a dozen times and have not worked . its not going to work now as well... You wont believe the amount of free doles these people are getting..its similar to welfare ...
 
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there are too many....these things have been tried since independence half a dozen times and have not worked . its not going to work now as well... You wont believe the amount of free doles these people are getting..its similar to welfare ...

I am not very aware of the Indian system of providing food security for the poor. But, in case of Bangladesh, it was always 'Food for work.' In times of famine or shortage of food, the GoP/GoB would prepare many many Public Works Programs throughout the country where the works were menial but easy.

There were Kaccha road constructions or canal digging works, where destitute people would come, work and get cereals. This was done when works were almost non-existent in the countryside. Situation now is not that desperate.

I hope, India should also take similar measures throughout the country and distribute cheap food in exchange for giving labor. Free dole is not really good. Hope, the GoI will undertake public works for food programs in the future.

However, for the time being I am very happy that the destitute people have the means to survive.
 
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I am not very aware of the Indian system of providing food security for the poor. But, in case of Bangladesh, it was always 'Food for work.' In times of famine or shortage of food, the GoP/GoB would prepare many many Public Works Programs throughout the country where the works were menial but easy.

There were Kaccha road constructions or canal digging works, where destitute people would come, work and get cereals. This was done when works were almost non-existent in the countryside. Situation now is not that desperate.

I hope, India should also take similar measures throughout the country and distribute cheap food in exchange for giving labor. Free dole is not really good. Hope, the GoI will undertake public works for food programs in the future.

However, for the time being I am very happy that the destitute people have the means to survive.

Food for work is a great system , but it wont buy you votes...
 
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India's rupee has stabilized in recent days to about 65 to USD. But this is only because of the intervention by the central bank. India is burning through its forex reserves trying to keep the rupee up. But without structural reforms that's just money waisted.
 
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India's rupee has stabilized in recent days to about 65 to USD. But this is only because of the intervention by the central bank. India is burning through its forex reserves trying to keep the rupee up. But without structural reforms that's just money waisted.

The central bank can't keep propping up the rupee forever, the currency speculators are circling like vultures. It's time to make hard decisions, make the necessary structural changes before the market really losses faith. However it's a election year comming and I doubt there is any gut to do anything right now.

I think the rupee will fall a bit more scraping the 70 mark before settling to around 63. Lets see where this takes us...
 
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India's growth slumps to 4.4 percent, worst in 4 years (Roundup)

India's growth slumps to 4.4 percent, worst in 4 years (Roundup)

New Delhi, Aug 30 — The worst fears of India Inc appear to have come true with the country's growth retarding to 4.4 percent for the first quarter of this fiscal -- the lowest in four years -- with a 1.2 percent contraction in factory output, government data showed Friday.

This is the worst quarterly growth in India's gross domestic product (GDP) since January-March quarter of 2009, the year of the global financial crisis.

The manufacturing sector contracted 1.2 percent and mining output dropped 2.8 percent in the quarter ended June 30.

The growth of agriculture sector fell to 2.7 percent, while the services sector registered a healthy 9.4 percent growth in April-June quarter of the current financial year, according to data released by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) here.

Quarterly GDP at factor cost at constant (2004-2005) prices for the first quarter of 2013-14 was estimated at Rs.13.71 lakh crore, as against Rs.13.14 lakh crore in the corresponding quarter of the previous year, showing a growth rate of 4.4 percent year-on-year, the CSO said.

The economy had expanded by 4.8 percent in the previous quarter and 5.4 percent during the corresponding quarter of last year.

Chairman of Prime Minister's economic advisory council C. Rangarajan said the quarterly numbers were on the expected line.

"The second quarter too might follow the same trajectory. I expect the third and fourth quarter to be better than the first half," Rangarajan said adding agriculture and manufacturing were likely to show better performance from the third quarter of the current fiscal.

"Everyone has assessed the fiscal growth to be between 4-5 percent, we have to wait and see the third and fourth quarter results for this," he said.

Earlier speaking in parliament, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh expressed hope that the economy would grow at 5.5 percent for the whole financial year.

"I sincerely hope that the growth rate will be 5.5 percent in the current financial year," the prime minister said in the Rajya Sabha, the upper house of parliament.

"The economy continues to tread in difficult waters as many challenges remain on the fore," said Naina Lal Kidwai, president of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI).

"The precariousness displayed by rupee has raised concerns afresh on the external front, industrial growth continues to face deceleration, and the investment cycle is yet to kick off," Kidwai said.

"The GDP figures for first quarter clearly show that the economy continues to be in the throes of a slowdown. The concern becomes more acute when we see that at the present moment, there are no clear indications that the economy has bottomed out," said Chandrajit Banerjee, director general, Confederation of Indian Industry.

"The economy needs the undivided attention of policy makers," he said.

IANS This article was distributed through the NewsCred Smartwire. Original article © IANS / Daily News 2013





Not just ‘Relatively flat’: Why Q1 GDP at 4.4% is a major slowdown

Not just ‘Relatively flat’: Why Q1 GDP at 4.4% is a major slowdown

by Sourav Majumdar Aug 30, 2013

#GDP growth rate #GDP slows down #HowThisWorks #India Economy #Q1 FY2014 GDP

A day after outgoing Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Duvvuri Subbarao did some plain speaking at his last public lecture before demitting office, saying much of the problems currently plaguing the economy actually lay at the government’s door came a big shocker: proving many estimates wrong, the first quarter gross domestic product (GDP) figure for FY14 came in at a lower-than-expected 4.4 percent. The previous quarter saw GDP grow 4.8 percent.

Ironically, a few hours before the GDP figures were released, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who has been at the receiving end for some time from both the Opposition and the economist fraternity for his government having botched up on the economic front, had made a detailed speech in Parliament, making a rather feeble attempt to explain the current crisis. The PM took pains to explain that the economy was fundamentally sound and that the rupee’s sharp fall was on account of external factors.

However, while the PM said the first quarter growth numbers would probably be ‘relatively flat’, what came in Friday evening was a figure which pointed to the crisis India finds itself in. With GDP growing at just 4.4 percent in the first quarter, the manufacturing sector in limbo and no real reforms likely from the government thanks to elections being round the corner, the picture seems pretty bleak despite the PM’s assurances and Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram’s 10-point economic revival plan announced earlier this week.


Image used for representational purposes only. Associated Press

Doomsayers’ scenario? Hardly. Consider the breakdown of the GDP figures for Q1. Manufacturing growth was at -1.2 percent and mining and quarrying at -2.8 percent, reflective of the continuing crisis in these areas. Agriculture, forestry and fishing grew 2.7 percent, providing some relief, while electricity (3.7 percent) construction (2.8 percent) and trade, hotels, transport and communication grew 3.9 percent during the quarter.

The one big area which saw growth was financing, insurance, real estate and business services which grew 8.9 percent over the first quarter of the previous fiscal.

Private final consumption expenditure (at constant prices), on the other hand, was estimated at Rs 8.51 lakh crore, just a shade higher than the previous fiscal’s Q1 figure of Rs 8.37 lakh crore, while gross fixed capital formation stood at Rs 4.57 lakh crore in Q1FY14 against a higher figure of Rs 4.63 lakh crore in the same period the previous fiscal.

Officialdom, however, continues to maintain its optimism that the second half of the fiscal will bring in better figures. The Chairman of the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council C Rangarajan, for instance, told CNBC-TV18 immediately after the dismal figures came in, that he expected growth to pick up in the second half once the trend in manufacturing was reversed.

Conceding that the Q1 figures were lower than expected Rangarajan said agriculture growth for the full year was expected to be around 4-5 percent on the back of a good monsoon, and that the projects by state-owned firms were also expected to boost manufacturing from the second half of the fiscal.

In a desperate bid to boost investment activity and bring the economy back to the growth path, the Cabinet Committee on Investments (CCI) had, earlier this week, cleared a staggering Rs 1.83 lakh crore worth of projects – both in the power and infrastructure sectors.

The rupee and the immediate context

The dismal Q1 growth numbers are likely to impact the rupee once again, after the RBI’s efforts over the past couple of days managed to bring back some semblance of respectability to the battered currency. Analysts, however, reckon that the second quarter will be severely impacted owing to the sharp fall in the currency and the movement in yields, and therefore few are expecting better numbers.

For now, it is clear that with the Food Bill and the Land Acquisition Bill being pushed through the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government, despite the economic crisis, is getting election-ready. That, for a number of economic observers, does not spell great news as far as the economy is concerned.

For now, while the policymakers at North Block maintain that the second half growth figures will finally shore up the full year GDP number, everything hinges on whether the manufacturing sector can reverse its declining trend and whether the projects which have been cleared actually begin revving up investment activity. Until then, there’s little chance of the current crisis of confidence abating.

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India's woes deepen as GDP misses expectations

India's woes deepen as GDP misses expectations

Published: Friday, 30 Aug 2013 | 7:41 AM ET
By: Jenny Cosgrave | Writer / Assistant Producer, CNBC.com
India's gross domestic product (GDP) growth missed expectations in the quarter to June slowing to a four-year low, adding to the country's economic problems amid an unprecedented free-fall in the rupee.

Official figures released on Friday revealed that India's GDP expanded by 4.4 percent year-on-year between April and June, falling short of analyst forecasts of 4.7 percent growth.

It marked the slowest growth since the January-March quarter of 2009, and was driven by a contraction in the country's mining and manufacturing sectors.

(Read more:Rupee slump buzz kill for Indian tourists)
Growth also slowed on the previous quarter – when GDP came in at 4.8 percent - and was less than last year's expansion rate of 5 percent, which was the slowest pace in a decade.

Manufacturing fell by 1.2 percent year-on-year in the June quarter, while mining slipped by 2.8 percent. Farming and construction output, however, both expanded, by 2.7 percent and 2. 8 percent respectively.

Earlier this week, BNP Paribas slashed its India growth forecast for fiscal 2014 to just 3.7 percent, from 5.2 percent previously. The bank cited fears that the economy was "entering a tail spin" as business confidence collapses under the weight of rapid rupee depreciation, rising energy costs, sharply tightening financial conditions and policy confusion.
The Indian rupee posted its biggest monthly fall in at least 18 years in August, but gained for a second straight session on Friday, eased by aggressive central bank intervention.
Fears 'unfounded'

Friday's data will add to the political and economic challenges faced by Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's government, with elections just a few months away.
Singh told parliament on Friday that there was no reason to believe the Indian economy was in a similar situation to 1991, adding that fears of Indian growth falling to 3 percent were completely "unfounded".

(Read more: Why the rupee may not be headed to 70)

He did say, however, that the falling value of the Indian rupee was "a matter of concern" that could be blamed in part on "external" factors.

Taimur Baig, chief economist for global market research at Deutsche Bank, told CNBC that India faced significant challenges.

(Read more: For many Indians, overseas collegedegrees now unaffordable)

"The risk is that markets are going to be disorderly - exchange rates overshoot, creating huge amounts of real economic pain. Whether that is repayment of debt difficulties for those who have borrowed in dollars, or inflation problems because of the pass through from the exchange rate, it is non-trivial," Baig said.

"India is also hostage to external market sentiment, so if we see continued volatility around taper, I think the exchange rate volatility will remain, not just in India but in large EM [emerging market] economies that are characterized by large current account deficit," he added.
 
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An economy in tatters

An economy in tatters

Sinking equity and currency markets show a braking economy. It may be years before it recovers.

Why Nations Fail. K.P. Krishnan, the Indian finance ministry's point man for all things capital markets, is re-reading the book by two US economists Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson. Krishnan's second dive into the acclaimed book since its release last summer is to find answers to the deep problems his employer, the government of India, faces with an economy in a tailspin. The answers are simple, really. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard economists argue that the economic success - or failure - of a country depends on the strength of its political and economic institutions.

But an anodised steel-like institutional framework is something India sorely misses. Years of political ineptitude have corroded the resilience of the world's thirdlargest economy by buying power. This despite warning lights on the government's dashboard going off regularly for at least two years now. When it rains, it is said, it pours. By the time India's stock markets closed on August 16, trading desks were in shock - the Bombay Stock Exchange's benchmark index, Sensex, had lost nearly four per cent, the sharpest single-day fall in four years.




The gradual decline began in early 2008, after the rupee-dollar rate touched 39. The rupee has been floating down like a feather against international currencies for nearly four months now. Between April 30 and August 23, Indians had to pay nearly one-fifth more for the US dollar, the world's preferred currency. The dollar was worth Rs 63.22 end of trades on Friday, August 23, and Deutsche Bank predicts it could touch Rs 70 in a month. Credit Agricole says it will not recommend buying the dollar at below Rs 75.

Krishnan, the bureaucrat who was part of a crack team that decided on India's response to the 2008/09 global meltdown, was anything but rattled at a recent seminar in Mumbai. At least, he didn't show it. The battered rupee, he said, "is a passing threat… this is a short-term threat." The next day, August 21, the pound sterling breached the Rs100 mark. The Indian currency has depreciated nearly one-fourth vis a vis the pound sterling since mid-March: Rs80.71 on March 12 versus Rs100.32 on August 23.

With its current account deficit (CAD) - the difference between exports and imports of goods, services and transfers - at an all-time high and a currency that had not shed value despite years of high inflation, it was only a matter of time before investors lost their unbridled optimism from the days of a once-robust economy. The trigger for that volte face came from half way across the world. On the back of intermittent signs of a recovery, the US Federal Reserve has hinted the end of low-cost money on tap, which means monetary tightening and consequent rise in the interest rates there. That was the cue for global funds to suck back billions back into the world's biggest economy from emerging markets. India was not spared. Between August 16 and 22, nearly foreign institutional investors were net sellers of Rs2,975 crore worth shares. FIIs are restive in other markets such as Indonesia, Brazil and Mexico.


Vulnerable India
Clearly, the Indian economy is in a much more vulnerable state than it was at the start of the financial crisis in September 2008. Then, India had a credible response to the meltdown set off by the collapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers. In a series of measures, the government infused liquidity into the system, cut duties, and overall boosted demand. The stimulus cost an estimated Rs 1.85 trillion. (One trillion equals 100,000 crore.) Such spending could be afforded only because India was growing at a fast clip: GDP growth was 9.4 per cent in 2006/07 and 9.3 per cent 2007/08, the two years preceding the Wall Street meltdown. And tax revenues had jumped 20 per cent in each of the years. The stimulus worked wonders: after a relatively slower GDP expansion of 6.7 per cent in 2008/09, growth bounced back to 8.6 per cent and 9.3 per cent each in the following two years.


Cut to today: GDP is growing at a much slower rate of five per cent with predictions that it will dip to a sub-five per cent level. Which means, the state treasury is looking less healthy, especially when expenses are rising at an unexpected pace. For instance, India sets aside more than one-third of its import bill for crude oil imports. Oil prices have risen about $12 a barrel in the last three months - a $1 increase in crude prices is a $900 million hole in India's trade balance - but they are expected to stay around $110. That's the good news but the bad news is that some 20 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) new refining capacity coming up in the West Asia region will mean a lower demand for India's fuel exports, which brought in nearly $59 billion in 2012/13.

If that's not all, the impact of the depreciating rupee will blow a hole in India's finances. "In rupee terms, if this slide continues, the effect will be huge," says Vandana Hari, the Singapore-based Editorial Director at energy specialist Platts Asia. Each rupee that the Indian currency depreciates on the US dollar, Rs10,000 crore gets added to the country's import bill (about Rs6.7 trillion in 2012/13). The dollar has become expensive by nearly Rs 11 since May. CAD, at $88 billion was 4.7 per cent of GDP in 2012/13, nearly double the 2.5 per cent level that RBI thinks is sustainable. Finance Minister P. Chidambaram is confident he will keep CAD under $70 billion this fiscal year but not all - the markets, for sure - are convinced.

Much of that scepticism emanates from what some think as policy failure over rising gold imports in recent years. Today, gold is the second largest import item after crude and petroleum products, beating electronics to third place. The surge in gold imports is both a consequence of unabated inflation which gold is used as a hedge against, and a rise in prices of the yellow metal. CAD is usually covered by foreign inflows - both institutional investors and foreign direct investment (FDI) - or by dipping into the country's forex reserves.

With capital flows drying up, India will tread the slightly-risky path of using debt to finance CAD. "We have no option but to rely on debt inflows in the immediate term," says Paresh Sukthankar, Executive Director at HDFC Bank. A recent report by ratings firm CRISIL showed corporate India had a outstanding foreign exchange debt of over $200 billion as of March 2013, of which close to 45 per cent is short term. The short-term foreign debt outstanding in March 2013 is nearly $100 billion, which is to be redeemed by March 2014. Forex reserves stood at $279 billion as of August 13.

In simple terms, this means a 2008-like strategy is not an option before India. "After and in 2008 and 2009, we survived because of the stimulus, which was a consumption stimulus. But we are not in that position anymore," says Devendra Kumar Pant, Chief Economist, India Ratings and Research.

The government's response to the rising CAD and overall sagging economy has proven to be too little, too late. To be fair, Chidambaram saw things early. Soon after he moved ministries to Finance from Home in July 2012, the government took bold decisions on easing rules for business - widely billed as "reforms 2.0". The reference was to the first set of economic reforms that Manmohan Singh, today prime minister, ushered in as finance minister in 1991.

Chidambaram was at the forefront of the changes announced that seemed to shake the government out of the stasis it was in. With an aim to trim subsidies, diesel prices were raised by Rs5 a litre and supply of subsidised cooking gas was capped. Up to 51 per cent overseas ownership was allowed in multi-brand retail and 49 per cent FDI permitted in airlines. Other changes eased FDI in telecom and oil and gas. But save for the Rs2,058-crore deal between Abu Dhabi-based Etihad Airways and India's Jet Airways, little came by way of foreign inflow. Without growth, foreign investors will shun India, says Samiran Chakraborty, Head of Regional Research, South Asia, Standard Chartered Bank. "The message that is going out is that we will push for reducing inflation and financial stability, and that growth is sacrificial." So much so that the government's recent measures of higher import duties on gold and silver, clamping down on foreign investment by companies, easing external commercial borrowings limits, and permitting quasi sovereign bonds have had little effect on the ground.

Caution: Pain Ahead
Partly, it is monetary policy that tripped Chidambaram's efforts over the past year. In much of his five-year term, RBI Governor D. Subbarao, due to retire on September 4, single mindedly waged a war against inflation. Questions are now being raised on the pace of interest rates hikes and whether his stance on inflation, widely seen more due to India's supply constraints and less a function of excess money sloshing around, was the optimal one. In the second week of August, in a debate in the Rajya Sabha on the state of economy, Chidambaram said the RBI must focus on growth and employment.


But that is easier said than done with consumer price inflation running in double digits for over a year. A direct casualty is crimped household consumption and savings. Even wholesale price inflation, indicative of the pace of price rise in the broader economy, which was on a downward spiral for some time, has started to inch up and is hurting business.

Gujarat food processor Kamdhenu Foods is unable to take large orders in recent months. "We couldn't accept an export order for 6.5 tons of bitter gourd slices because its price has jumped up from Rs10 a kilo three months back to Rs25 a kg now," says Bipin Shah, General Manager.

With fuel prices set to rise soon, bankers say resultant inflation will again put pressure on interest rates. The recent monetary tightening is already having a spillover impact: Axis Bank, HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank have hiked lending rates.

The banking sector, already under stress due to higher bad loans, is getting shocks from new industries as the effects of a decelerating economy spread. State Bank of India, the country's largest lender, got a shock in the first quarter of 2013/14 from the rising slippages in the agricultural sector. There is another looming danger in infrastructure loans. "There are issues of asset liability mismatches in the banking industry because of shorter maturity deposits and longer term loan to infrastructure companies," says S. Viswanathan, a managing director at SBI.


Unfortunately for India, then, options that will yield immediate benefits are limited. The economy is unlikely to shake off its sluggishness in the medium term - until 2015/16 or even later, according to some. Sonal Varma has a list of big ifs to see the needle will move on the economy. "If you start making the right moves, if there is change of guard and if there is a clear focus in reviving growth, it will take about 12 to 18 months for things to start turning," says Varma, Executive Director and India Economist at Japanese financial house Nomura. "The rupee is a symptom of the problem, there is a crisis of confidence and the credibility of policymakers has taken a hit."

The Congress Party-led United Progressive Alliance government just does not have enough time or numbers with to kickstart large-scale reform measures with general elections scheduled before the summer of 2014 and key sections of the UPA are already in election mode, as also the principal opposition coalition, the National Democratic Alliance, led by the Bharatiya Janata Party. Result: a polity distracted from the needs of the economy. "We don't have a thought leadership for the society that will emerge tomorrow. We need to do quite a few things to make this [growth] work," says Kishore Biyani, Chairman at retailer Future Group. Pre-election surveys show regional parties gaining strength at the hustings, likely increasing political instability at the Centre - which doesn't portend well for the economy.

Where does the economy go from here? GDP growth is already at a 10-year low of five per cent in 2013/14 against 6.2 per cent the previous year. CRISIL is downright bearish. "All our forecasts - growth, inflation, fiscal deficit and CAD - are under revision and they will be revised unfavourably," insists D.K. Joshi, Chief Economist at the firm. One voice sounds ominous ahead of the release of GDP data for the April-June quarter on August 30. "The way the Indian economy is going, it is testing my optimism," Kaushik Basu, Chief Economist, the World Bank, said recently at a seminar in New Delhi. Basu, who was Chief Economic Adviser to the government of India until a year ago, is predicting a 4.8 per cent growth for April-June.

Still, two factors hold out some hope. The biggest drag on the economy comes from the services sector and industries, which together make for about 85 per cent of India's GDP. But it is agriculture, despite its smaller contribution to the economy, which could stop the economy from stalling. The Indian Meteorological Department has recorded normal to excess rainfall in 30 of the country's 36 meteorological sub-divisions between June 1 and August 14. The area-weighted rainfall has been 13 per cent above normal.


There has been a notable rise in area under cultivation of pulses (25 per cent more), coarse cereals (15 per cent) and oil seeds (15 per cent) this season from 2012/13. Total crop area sown has increased over nine per cent. "If you compare agriculture output, we will achieve the same growth that we did in 2011/12, which will have a deeper impact on inflation," says Himanshu, an agrieconomist who teaches at New Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University. (He goes only by his first name.) Farm output in 2011/12 grew 2.5 per cent from the year before - it was 1.9 per cent in 2012/13. Nomura has a four per cent target for agriculture this year. "I expect very strong agriculture growth this year, which should help the rural economy," says Adi Godrej, Chairman of the locks-toshampoos Godrej group. Farming is the primary economic activity for some 70 per cent of Indians.

The second set of strands in the wind that augurs well for the economy is the five state polls and the general elections. Odd as it sounds, elections are good news for the economy, for money - often black, unaccounted for cash that otherwise will not find its way into the system - boosts growth. "Five states are going for election, and with a general election, election spending will provide a stimulus," says Ajit Ranade, Chief Economist at Aditya Birla Group, which runs metals to telecom businesses. Other small gains to be had in the coming quarters include the impact of a falling rupee on exporters.

Then, there is the man being billed as the one with the silver bullet: Raghuram Govind Rajan. The RBI governor-designate has not spoken of his new assignment and little in his academic past indicates his monetary DNA, if any. But the street has already set expectations for him. In the first six months, says Rajesh Mokashi, Deputy Managing Director at ratings agency Care Ltd, Rajan's priority should be to balance inflation and growth dynamics. In the longer term, he should focus on asset quality in banking, fix potential asset-liability mismatches on bank books, and issue new banking licences.

Time will tell if Rajan can deliver growth even while reining in inflation. But, to be sure, India's fundamentals are strong in the medium and long term. Hundreds of thousands, if not millions, are joining the middle class even at a five per cent rate of GDP expansion. Its workforce is adding a million every month, making it the youngest among major economies. Sanjeev Sanyal, global strategist at Deutsche Bank in Singapore, points out that China has reached the end of its demographic boom. "This offers a good opportunity for India to take the place vacated by China," he says. But, he adds, India has to get its act right in terms of governance, property rights and primary education. In other words, building institutions - the biggest takeaway from Why Nations Fail. Sometimes the best fixes are found in truisms.
BT RETRO

More than two and a half years ago, Business Today warned in its cover story India Slowing, that the Indian economy was showing worrying signs (Feb 20, 2011.) Further cover stories tracking the decline include Watch Your Step (July 8, 2012) and Stepping Over the Edge (Oct 14, 2012). See businesstoday.in/archives-sep1513 for previous stories


Additional reporting by Anilesh Mahajan, Taslima Khan and Suprotip Ghosh.
Research inputs by Jyotindra Dubey
 
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India's economic slowdown sparks crisis talk

India's economic slowdown sparks crisis talk

30 August 2013 Last updated at 04:30 ET By Puneet Pal Singh Business reporter, BBC News
India's rupee is the one of the worst performing currencies in the world this year adding to its woes
The gravity of any crisis facing a nation can often be judged by the one to which it is being compared.

In the US, the peak of the 2008-09 global financial crisis saw references made to the Depression of the 1930s.

Over in Greece, the country's debt problems in recent years triggered comparisons with Argentina's default back in 2001, which at the time was the biggest sovereign default in history.

In India's case, its recent economic issues have sparked talks of a repeat of the situation it faced in 1991, often considered its worst economic crisis.

The crisis saw its currency tumble and its foreign exchange reserves depleted. Things turned so bad that India eventually had to be rescued by the International Monetary Fund.

Analysts say the situation in India is not as bad as it was then. The country now has reserves to support nearly seven months of imports, compared with just under 15 days back then. Even so, the signs are worrying.

"The very fact that it is being compared to that situation shows the seriousness of the concerns over the situation," says Tony Nash, vice president at IHS.

"There is no doubt that things are pretty bad in India."

Growing problems
One of the key areas of concern is India's burgeoning current account deficit, which hit a record high of 6.7% of gross domestic product (GDP) last year.

Continue reading the main story
A current account deficit happens when the country's import bill is bigger than its earnings from exports. A widening deficit puts strain on the nation's foreign exchange reserves.

India's position has been further complicated by the fact that foreign investors have been withdrawing money from the economy.

International investors have pulled out nearly $12bn in shares and debt from India's markets since the beginning of June, hurting the stock markets as well as its currency.

The Indian rupee has fallen more than 20% against the US dollar since the start of this year. That has made India's imports more expensive and added to the country's economic problems.

Investors have been pulling out for a variety of reasons, not least the slowdown in its economy, as well as a recovery in the US.

"If you are an investor and you want to put your money in a riskier economy, you are looking to have the capacity of making a much better return than you would get in a more stable economy," says Stuart Oakley, head of Asia currency trading at Nomura.

"India is no longer providing that option, as the growth differential between India and the US has collapsed."

India's economy grew by 4.4% in the April-June quarter. The US economy expanded at an annualised rate of 2.5% in the second quarter.

'Crisis of credibility'
For their part, India's policymakers have been taking steps not just to stem the rupee's decline, but also to attract a fresh wave of foreign investment to the country.

But so far, they have little to show for their efforts.

The country opened up its multi-brand retail sector, seen by many as a key growth area, to foreign investors last year. But as yet, none of the big brands have expressed an interest to enter the market.

Analysts say the key factor is that investors are worried about a lack of continuity in policy changes.

"There is a huge divergence in the views and the stance of the two major political parties on the issue of foreign direct investment in retail," says Siddhartha Sanyal, chief India economist at Barclays.

And with elections due next year, many fear that policies may change depending on which party comes to power.

"They are really at the precipice of a crisis of credibility. Investors have become sceptical whether a new government will have the mandate, the backing and the drive to carry on reforms," says Mr Nash.

Once again, the slowdown in India's economy has only made things more difficult.

"Foreign investors may have still taken some kind of a calculated risk, if there was growth momentum in the country," says Mr Sanyal of Barclays.

Continue reading the main story
Use the dropdown for easy-to-understand explanations of key financial terms:
Deficit
The amount by which spending exceeds income over the course of a year.
In the case of trade, it refers to exports minus imports. In the case of the government budget, it equals the amount the government needs to borrow during the year to fund its spending. The government's "primary" deficit means the amount it needs to borrow to cover general government expenditure, excluding interest payments on debts. The primary deficit therefore indicates whether a government will run out of cash if it is no longer able to borrow and decides to stop repaying its debts.
"But if you are a big business, right now you would say, 'Let me just wait and watch and see how things develop, because I am not losing much in any case.'"

In a recent interview with India's CNN-IBN channel, Ratan Tata, one of the country's leading and most respected business leaders, warned that India has "lost the confidence of the world".

Double whammy
To make matters more complicated, India's policymakers are facing a tricky situation.

The slowdown in economic growth has triggered calls for easing of monetary policy, to help businesses and consumers get through this difficult period.

However, the continued decline in the rupee - coupled with a surge in prices of essential items, such as onions - has limited the scope for any major moves.

Analysts say that given the various factors, the most important thing that India needs to do is restore faith among international investors.

They say that will help attract investments, which in turn will help boost economic growth and also help prop up the currency.

"India is a country of 1.2 billion consumers - so there is clearly a huge amount of potential, no one can deny that - and foreign companies want to be there," says Mr Oakley.

"But they need overwhelming reforms, not just on the policy front, but also on how the whole system works to attract these investors."

The crisis of 1991 is credited to have sparked the first major reforms in the country, which resulted in years of robust growth.

While the problem this time around may not be as bad as then, analysts say the solution is the same.

Hopefully for India, the result will be too.
 
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