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India is on course to complete a remarkable turnaround

IndoCarib

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Whatever you think about India – and it’s been in the news for good and bad this week – you can’t ignore it. Years of playing bridesmaid to China look like they are coming to an end. On current trends, the South Asian giant will soon be the world’s fastest-growing major economy and its most populous country.

It has certainly been the stand-out stock market in the past year, with Bombay’s Sensex index up more than 35pc, outpacing even the red-hot markets in the rest of Asia such as Shanghai’s A-shares (up 19pc), Indonesia (26pc) and the Philippines (21pct).

It has been a remarkable turnaround story when you consider that two years ago everyone was agonising about years of sub-par growth and a potential balance of payments crisis.

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India’s stars are better aligned than they have been for many years, with a reformist government, positive demographics, a newly credible central bank and a large dollop of luck in the form of a plunging oil price – India is one of the world’s biggest beneficiaries of cheaper commodities. The recent highlight has been the announcement of the newish BJP government’s first budget, much anticipated and largely delivering what investors hoped for.
Often it is better to travel than to arrive in investment, but this time the market held on to its gains, just as it did after the election of Narendra Modi as prime minister last May. Then, too, the pre-election bull market carried on regardless.

If India is to match its potential, it needs to make progress in four areas. First, like China, it must find work for its urbanising, better-educated millions.

They can’t all work for Infosys, so the country must build on its success in IT services and take on China as a global manufacturing hub. “Made in India” must be more than a slogan, so it was encouraging that the budget took a number of steps to improve the business environment, cutting red tape and encouraging the development of skills.

Second, it needs to reform a Byzantine and ineffective tax system. The introduction of a national goods and services tax will make it easier to do business across states, expand the tax base and reduce the deadening cascade of multiple layers of taxation. The clarification of anti-avoidance rules will mean multi-nationals no longer view India as a no-go zone.

Third, India needs to get to grips with its dreadful infrastructure. A 33pc increase in spending on rail, road and power generation is key to catching up with China. Beijing’s oppressive centralised system may be less appealing to Western eyes than India’s chaotic and colourful democracy, but for 30 years it has made the trains run on time.


Fourth, it must balance the books which have been in deficit for many years. The tax reforms will help, as will a scaling back of various welfare schemes and subsidies that the previous Congress government implemented between 2008 and 2012.

This is where the dollop of luck comes in. The unexpected plunge in the oil price in the second half of last year has taken the pressure off on two fronts. First, it has allowed the government to cut back on fuel subsidies. Second, it has helped inflation ease back, which in turn has allowed the Bank of India, under highly regarded Governor Rajan, to cut interest rates twice this year.

So India has plenty of helpful tailwinds today but, in terms of its long-term growth potential, none is as important as its demographic dividend. Nearly two thirds of India’s 1.25bn population is under the age of 35, according to Barclays.

Over the next 25 years its population is expected to rise by 350m people, about three quarters of which will be of working age. Because of that, in tandem with all the other reforms and structural changes in India, the country could be on the brink of an explosion in consumption and growth. China, by contrast, thanks to its one child policy, faces a rapid ageing and then shrinking of its population.

So, looking forward, India could achieve growth of up to 8pc a year for the next decade, amazing for an economy which already accounts for 3pc of global GDP. Better still for investors, the country is full of high-quality, well-managed companies well-placed to take advantage of its economic potential. It’s not the cheapest emerging market, but there’s a good reason for that.


India is on course to complete a remarkable turnaround - Telegraph
 
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dumb brits giving economics advice. the only economics that ever worked for them was colonizing others.
 
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Five Reasons To Invest In India - Forbes

1. Reforms Matter.
In India, these include foreign direct investment, the Land Acquisition Bill, the coal and power sector, direct transfer subsidies, streamlined tax regimes. The Bombay Stock Exchange’s Sensex index is up 19.15% in rupees since Modi took over in May. It rose 8.9% in all of 2013.

2. China-style GDP Growth.
India is expected to have the fastest GDP growth rate in emerging markets and will beat China by 2016 if it grows over 7.5% next year. The government is counting on 8%.
“You have to be in India,” says Peter Kohli, CEO of DMS Funds, an emerging markets specialty firm in Leesport, Pa. “It’s a bull market for the next five years,” he told me over a sushi lunch at Koi in New York recently.

3. Raghuram Rajan.
Investors like the monetary policy discipline of Rajan. India is focused on managing inflation, which helps the central bank to lower interest rates as it did recently. A stable and strengthening rupee also reduces forex risk for U.S. investors. The lower price of oil and better fiscal management, including cutting government subsidies, will help reduce twin fiscal deficits.

4. Corporate Earnings.
India Inc’s corporate earnings growth rate is expected to average 7% this year, which is better than the average earnings growth rate in the MSCI All Country World Index. Next year is even better once corporate taxes get cut, and the federal goods and services tax replaces state taxes for companies shipping goods across boundaries. Bloomberg data estimates average corporate earnings for the MSCI India Index to be over 16%.

5. Early Innings.
It’s not too late to buy India. Fund managers like Kohli recommend buying on pull-backs in the market. Current forward valuation levels point to sustainable growth at a reasonable price over the long term, Emerging Global says.


“Modi knows where and how he wants to get from point A to point B and he’ll do it,” says Vladimir Signorelli, president of boutique research investment firm Bretton Woods Research in Long Valley, NJ.
BWR released their monthly index rankings for 46 countries. India ranked at No. 10. It is second only to China as a top two emerging markets for investors for the month ahead. China was ranked No. 7. E.U. countries, the U.S. and Japan all finished out the top 10.
 
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I thought it was a "remarkable turnaround" refering to decreasing rapes of women in India. I was wrong.
 
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You dream so much of rapes that you fail to notice this thread talks about economic turnaround. I am sure you know nothing about economics

Pretty rich for someone who has his boyfriend vaj's picture as a profile pic.
 
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dumb brits giving economics advice. the only economics that ever worked for them was colonizing others.

It is not advice. The article only comments on how economy if looking up since Modi govt took over

Pretty rich for someone who has his boyfriend vaj's picture as a profile pic.

Again. Your thinking is twisted. Vajpayee is my favourite PM, like Rajapaksa is yours.
 
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Pretty rich for someone who has his boyfriend vaj's picture as a profile pic.
Ahh here is my favorite butthurt Lankan poster:lol:!!Howdy mate:wave:,still sleeping and wet dreaming about rapes and molestations,are we:azn:!!
 
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12% GDP growth rate for India action plan

Read the precedent part in the images as it is very important and helps you understand how these measures help the economy.

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Note :- single window clearance in singapore clears a project within 26 days while for india it takes 168 days , this delay and red tape spoils investor sentiment to enter indian markets.

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Greater Pacific Capital : Sign of The Times
 
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India's strengths which will help it in long term

People

> Biggest market globally

(2nd currently) (1st by 2030 with 1.5 billion people)

> Attractive age profile

median age of 26 (compared to china's 35)
8% of worlds population is an indian under the age of 25

>Rapid urbanization

By 2050 around 500 million people to to be urban

> A large and wealthy indian diaspora around the world.

Expariate population of around 25-30 million people estimated wealth of $1 trillion and annual income of $400 billion.

Large amount of this money is sent back to india as remittance ;) , around $ 70 billion which is 4% of our gdp.

Resources

> 1.57 mn km2 of arable land 2nd largest in the world ( 1st is US with 1.6 mn km2)

> Large coal & oil reserves ( auctioning them will be a source of income as seen)

> worlds largest thorium reserves along the coastline of tamil nadu (nuclear energy)

> Wind and solar energy potential due to weather patterns

> other minerals
iron ore(5th)
manganese ore(7th)
bauxite(5th)

Institutions

> Stable governance system despite diversity.

>Uninterrupted democracy with smooth transition of power.

>Strong independent institution
(judiciary , central bank , Election commission)
 
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