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Alamgir, i might even believe you, if i didn't see the transformation with my own eyes. I have already seen tremendous growth in 5 years, so much so that it seems like a different world. I went to my home town Lucknow, India, after 5 years abroad. Its a different city to say the least. Its the kind of transformation that happens in decades in other countries. And Lucknow is a 2nd tier city, not even 1st. There was not a single mall in Lucknow when i left 5 years ago, there are 15 now. The roads are broader, cleaner in general. Where there used to be traffic jams earlier, there are flyovers on every busy section. etc etc
And all this in a 2nd tier city.
 
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India's forex reserves at a record $214.835 bn
13 Jul 2007, 2040 hrs IST,REUTERS

MUMBAI: India's foreign exchange reserves rose to a record $214.835 billion on July 6, from $213.486 billion a week earlier, the Reserve Bank of India said in its weekly statistical supplement on Friday.

The central bank said foreign currency assets expressed in US dollar terms included the effect of appreciation or depreciation of other currencies held in its reserves such as the euro, pound sterling and yen.

The foreign exchange reserves include India's Reserve Tranche Position in the International Monetary Fund, the RBI said.
 
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Trend Watch: Economic outlook

Industrial Production data for the month of April released in the month of June, was gratifying to the extent of confirming the fact that the Indian economy is on high growth trajectory, while after one month the same data for May evoked the discussion about its slowing down.

In April 2007, the index for industrial production was estimated to grow by 13.6% annual growth while manufacturing sector soaring by 15.1% during the same period. However, government`s exercise of revising the same estimates has been disappointing, with a downward revision. The official data released this week (July 12) has revised the April IIP growth to 12.3%. Moreover, for May, the index is estimated to registered Y-o-Y growth 11.1% lower than 11.7% in the same month a year ago.

The table given shows that important sectors like manufacturing and consumer durables headed downward. Additionally slump in automobile sales, drop in banks` credit raised fears about the slowdown of the economy. However, drawing such an extreme conclusion doesn`t seem to be required given the rise in capital good sector. Moreover, plausible 8.7% growth in infrastructure, and better performance by mining and capital goods sectors can`t be overlooked.

It is well-known fact the current manufacturing growth is propelled by investment demand and not only consumer demand, which warrants a sustainable growth in the sector. Though the numbers have headed southward, holding RBI`s tightening monetary policy in 2006 and early 2007culpable for the downward movement, RBI`s stand is very much desired, given the skewed performance of the sectors, especially agriculture. The prime sector i.e. agriculture, is lagging much behind, and continuous robust industrial growth in such scenario will create imbalances in the economy, hampering its growth prospects in the future. Thus, such adjustments here and there, confirm soft-landing of the economy and therefore should be dealt with , without creating too much of concern.

The widely tracked inflation data published on Friday also injected a surprise in the market. The WPI-based inflation stood at 4.27% for the week ended June 30, higher than 4.13% in the previous week. Nonetheless, the rate still stands within the RBI`s comfort limit of 5% for this fiscal. The rise in the inflation rate was attributed to disrupted supply of commodities due to heavy rains. In near future however, amount and distribution of monsoon will be the key determinant for the movement in prices (especially for primary articles). Besides, the rising trade has made the domestic prices more sensitive to the global ones. Skyrocketing crude oil price globally will also put upward pressure on domestic fuel prices. All these drivers needs to be monitored but still upto 5% inflation rate is very high for the economy growing at 8% plus.

Sharp appreciation in the Rupee versus Dollar received a wide attention by both market players and policymakers. The domestic currency, supported by better economic prospects and foreign capital inflows in equity market has gained over 9% in this year so far, making exporters` life difficult. Though, the market participants drew a conclusion that the RBI may not cap the Rupee rally when the government announced relief packages to for Indian small & medium enterprises (SME) sector exporters, it is unlikely to to sustain for long. At very first place, offered package is very inadequate for Indian exporters to improve their margins and they have expressed their dis-satisfactions on this. Since the SME contributes largest part in the country`s exports, and provides employment to millions of people, a shut down of such enterprises will cost heavily for the government. Additionally, since the sharp Rupee appreciation reducing the earnings of Indian BPO (Business Processing output) units, may force these IT and BOP units to scale down their domestic operations. It would create a huge unrest in the society as BPO is the major employment generator for Indian youths. Such real economic factors, increase possibility of the central bank to step in the currency market to cut the Rupee rally. Liquidity sterlisation via MSS (Market Stabilization Scheme) is a widely used instrument by the apex bank in recent weeks.

In the same line an CRR hike is also widely expected by the experts. Moreover, incremental CRR which targets on quantity mechanism is foreseen ahead of the monetary policy review on July 31, 2007, while policy rate hike is unlikely for the near short-term.
 
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Indians find home in southern China
By Steven Chan and Liang Qiwen (China Daily)
Updated: 2007-07-14 09:06

GUANGZHOU: Of the myriad ethnic groups that have made Guangzhou something of a multinational, multicultural melting pot, one that is growing in increasing numbers in recent years is the Indian community.
On the back of Guangzhou's strong economy and in the wake of China's WTO entry, more and more Indians have chosen to set up companies in the city.

With these entrepreneurs have come families, Indian staff, restaurants and banks and other businesses looking to service this growing community. UCO Bank and Bank of Baroda, two of India's largest, have recently set up branches in Guangzhou.

While official numbers are hard to come by, residential enclaves in downtown Taojin Lu and Xiaobei Lu have experienced surges in recent years. Today there are an estimated 2,000 to 5,000 Indians living in the area.

But though in China, observers will find Indians follow traditional, rather than local, customs and culture. Rather than rolling up en-masse at a Chinese New Year's Day festival, Indian residents are more likely to be found socializing in large numbers behind closed doors in secluded restaurants.

The Indian community is very "close-knit", admits Yogesh Nagaonkar, manager and co-owner of Indian restaurant Haveli. While there is no structured community life, Indians venturing to the city are quickly absorbed into a low-key social group that is actually very open to insiders, he says.

"Welcoming new people is the way to network and build relationships for common benefit. It is part of our culture."

Frequent social gatherings and cross-patronage of businesses ensures everyone gets to know each other very quickly. And arrivals from home never appear without a name or a contact number at hand.

"China is a good country and Guangzhou a good city to do business in, so others want to join us. The environment is very comfortable and many people can now speak English, so it is easy to communicate," Nagaonkar says.

The newly wed restauranteur said his wife will be coming to live with him next month. "We are in a good location, there is shopping, transportation, schools. Everything is here. I feel like this is my home."

Of the many Indian companies setting up, most are in export or light manufacturing - garments, shoes, textiles and jewelry, while Indian importers trade in raw materials such as iron ore, says Bonwe Yeung, liaison officer of the local chapter of the Indian Chamber of Commerce.

"Indian companies come to Guangzhou because there are many advantages - a strong economy and so many resources. Wages are low and the environment is good for them.
 
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Sensex poised to set more records
By Geetha Bhaskaran, Special to Gulf News
Published: July 14, 2007, 23:31

Mumbai: It's party time for stocks and Indian markets are poised to press ahead to record peaks this week, the third in a row as foreign investors pour money into the fastest growing major economy after China.

Inflows from foreign portfolio investors into Indian shares have topped $3.5 billion since late June, or nearly half the total $7.7 billion for 2007.

The sudden spurt in investment has been the main driver for the stock market.

The top-30 Sensex, which rose 2.1 per cent last week, has hit record highs in eight of the 10 trading days so far in July.

"More gains are in store," said equity trader Ashwin Dalal. "The rally is entirely liquidity-driven, and I don't see cash flows slowing down."

The strong rupee that has gained more than nine per cent this year has given foreign investors an added incentive to buy into Indian blue-chips.

Historically, foreign equity strategists used to factor in currency depreciation losses when picking stocks in India.

The rupee's rise has given an expected bonanza to investors.

"The Sensex has risen over 10 per cent this year," strategist V. Venugopal said. "For foreign investors, the returns are double in dollar terms because of the rupee's gains."

However, the rupee's ascent has squeezed margins of export-driven companies like Infosys Technologies, which last week lowered its full-year earnings forecast in rupees.

The software firm, which is also listed on the US Nasdaq, said its operating margin fell to 24.9 per cent in the quarter ended June from 27.8 per cent in the March quarter.

The focus this week will be on bigger rival Tata Consultancy Services, which reports quarterly earnings tomorrow, followed by Wipro on Thursday and Satyam Computer Services the day after.

Although earnings are widely expected to show the rupee's effect, the outlook for the booming sector remains bullish with companies grabbing large outsourcing deals at a fast rate.

Infosys added 35 new clients in the June quarter and over 3,700 staff.

"The rupee's rise may have affected export competitiveness, but has had a salutary impact on inflation and over time lower inflation should compensate for nominal appreciation," a finance ministry official told reporters in New Delhi last week.

The comment, widely published in the media, reinforced the view the government was comfortable with a stronger rupee, which hit a nine-year high of 40.28 per dollar in May.

The central bank intervened aggressively last week to rein in the rupee when it neared that level, but analysts believe surging foreign inflows will push the rupee past 40.

Inflation crept higher to 4.27 per cent at end-June, from 4.13 per cent a week earlier, data showed on Friday, but the Reserve Bank of India is unlikely to raise interest rates when it reviews policy on July 31.

The central bank has raised rates five times since mid-2006, but held them at its last review in April. The higher rates have slowed loan growth and hit sales of motorcycles and trucks.

Last week, the government said industrial production grew an annual 11.1 per cent in May, still robust but below a revised 12.4 per cent growth in April, as higher rates began to bite spending.

Manufacturing, which makes up about 15 per cent of gross domestic product and nearly 80 per cent of industrial output, rose 11.9 per cent in May from a year earlier, compared with a downwardly revised 13.7 per cent in April.

Industrial output, which generates a fifth of econ-omic activity, has been driven by strong consumer demand for items such as cars and mobile phones.

Other big results due this week include: Cement maker ACC Ltd, Larsen & Toubro and Ranbaxy Laboratories on Thursday and Ambuja Cements on Friday.
 
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Targeting the homing instinct
With domestic buying slowing down, developers are increasingly focusing on NRIs and promising them world-class housing in India

VARUN SONI
Posted online: Sunday, July 15, 2007 at 0000 hours IST

Non-Resident Indian (NRI), Gurdeep Singh, who has been living in Canada for the last 11 years, recently bought a property in a fully integrated township being developed by a leading builder in Amritsar. Costing Rs 44 lakh, for Singh the primary reason for booking the property in his home state of Punjab was sentimental. “The lure to come home is always there and with the realty boom that is sweeping India at the moment, it was only prudent that NRIs like us invest in property in the country,” he says.

While NRIs form 10-20% of the total number of buyers of any particular project (mostly residential) across India, in states like Punjab, Kerala and Gujarat, the percentage is as high as 30-40%. Coupled with Hyderabad, these states account for the maximum number of NRIs and many builders in these areas are focusing on developing townships specifically for people of Indian origin living abroad. As per estimates, around $600 million came from NRI investors into India last year, a figure that is likely to increase rapidly every year.

“Most of the NRIs are following a trend of returning to their homeland after retirement or sending their children to India for studies, with the result that they are always looking for a second home in India, preferably located in their hometown” says Kamal Taneja, MD, TDI. Which is why developers are coming up with township projects targeting NRIs in the states of Punjab, Haryana and Kerala. With the IT boom, there are IT professionals who want to settle in a place which will offer them IT opportunities. So places like Bangalore, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad, Pune, Indore, etc. too are becoming popular with them. Such township projects can also come up in areas that are witnessing a real estate boom and major developers are coming up with their projects in cities like Agra, Sonepat, Panipat and Moradabad.

But why are builders specifically targeting NRIs? Is it advantageous to build townships that are catering to NRIs needs and requirements? Says Rajit Kakar, MD, Silver City Group, “Builders are specifically targeting NRIs mainly on account of two factors—money inflow from NRIs is much easier and payments are received on time.”

According to Suryavir Singh, official spokesperson, Sahara Infrastructure and Housing, some of the other reasons why builders are targeting NRIs are:

* Many NRIs are getting professionally attached to India because of vibrancy in the economy and a chance to earn handsome returns.

* The government is promoting NRI investors because it is a very good source to earn foreign exchange.

* NRIs are emotionally routed to their motherland and their intense desire of owning a house ‘back home’ drives them to invest in real estate.

Agrees Jackbastian Nazareth, Executive Director, Sobha Developers Ltd, “Most townships offer a lifestyle which is more in tune with the lifestyle the NRIs have been used to abroad and it is natural that they would prefer to have an extension of that kind of a lifestyle when they relocate to India. Further, they are not averse to investing in something which has a greater value eventually — even if it costs a bit more than the run of the mill apartments.”

Also, NRIs are allowed to make real estate investments in India without any cap on the quantity or the number of investments. Returns from real estate investments in India have consistently performed well and even out performed the other investment options and easy home loan availability from financial institutions in India, NRI remittances and repatriation procedures has emerged as the best of all the available prospects for NRIs looking forward to return to India.

“To an NRI, a base in the homeland also brings with it a sense of security. The number of NRIs who are investing in property for sentimental reasons and for better investment returns is quickly multiplying. What has also made NRIs flock to India has been the initiative by builders and real estate dealers to ensure transparency about the projects on offer and fairness in dealings. NRIs consider their investments to be safe and rewarding when they park their money in real estate,” says Rohit Malhotra, CEO, Realtech Group.

The specifications of these projects too are customised to cater to NRI needs. So, there are premium air-conditioned apartments with wooden flooring in the bedrooms, Italian marble, modular kitchens etc. Some of the other salient features include:

* Redefining elegant and healthy living with 82% open exquisitely green landscaped spaces and water bodies, with meticulous architectural planning.

* Modern construction with straight-line designing. Earthquake resistant RCC construction conforming to Zone-V seismic compliance.

* Surface and basement parking.

* Rain water harvesting.

* Environment friendly with all conceivable facilities like a state-of-the-art club with a swimming pool, tennis courts, gymnasium, jogging tracks, golf putting green, convenience stores, amphitheatre, children’s play areas, indoor and outdoor games, banquet and community halls, party lawns and entertainment hub.

* Other features that can find mention in townships targeting NRIs include club house, estate drive, party lawns, entry lake and fountain, meditation park, tennis court, table tennis room, card room, basketball court, badminton court, kids pool, steam room, hot water jacuzzi, steam and sauna.

A package that is bound to floor the NRIs.
 
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India's "Running on Empty"
Global Envision has an interesting new story on a particular challenge facing India in its path to progress: water, or more accurately, the lack of it. Aside from squabbles with China over water, it has to deal with a dilapidated infrastructure for delivering water and other challenges brought on by a longtime neglect of its water infrastructure:


New Delhi's water woes are typical of many parts of India. Most low- and middle-income neighborhoods in large metropolitan cities face similar shortages. But those worst hit by the shortage are the poor. The majority of slum areas in cities like Mumbai (Bombay) have no tap water; period. The water crisis, decades in the making, is getting worse just as India's economy is making impressive strides. A soaring population, rapid urbanization, and a thirsty farm belt are all putting enormous strains on India's anemic water infrastructure. The resulting water shortage could severely impact India's agricultural sector and thus hamper the country's ability to feed its billion-plus population and also cause internal and transborder conflicts.
Measured by conventional indicators, water stress, which occurs when the demand for water exceeds the available amount during a certain period or when poor quality restricts its use, is increasing rapidly, especially in developing countries like India and China. According to the 2006 Human Development Report (New York: UNDP), approximately 700 million people in 43 countries live below the water-stress threshold of 1,700 cubic meters per person. By 2025, that figure will reach 3 billion, as water stress intensifies in China, India, and sub-Saharan Africa...

Uneven access to water, wastage, and widespread corruption in collecting water tariffs are compounding the waterscarcity problem, and no city exemplifies this better than New Delhi. According to a 2006 United Nations Development Program paper, New Delhi's water demand is estimated at 3,600 million liters of water per day (and rising); the highest of any city in the country. The local public-water utility, Delhi Jal Board, supplies approximately 3040 million liters per day, out of which only about 1,730 million liters reach consumers, because of massive distribution losses resulting, for example, from leaks from old pipes.

Access and use of water varies widely. The Delhi Development Report 2006 (Delhi government [New York: Oxford University Press]), published with the help of the UNDP, points out that almost 27 percent of homes in the city receive tap water for less than three hours a day, and 55 percent of households receive water for only three to six hours a day. In addition, almost 18 per cent of households receive less than 100 liters per capita daily (lpcd), while 31 percent of households get over 200 lpcd. Also, of the nearly 690,000 households living in slum areas, 16 percent receive less than 25 lpcd and another 71 percent receive between 25 and 50 lpcd. Not surprisingly, reliable access to tap water is a major sales pitch for the posh condominium and apartment buildings that are sprouting up in the suburbs of almost every big city. To guarantee 24-hour running water, contractors are digging wells deep underground. Not surprisingly, the water table in some parts of Delhi, for example, have dropped by as much as 30 meters, compared to levels in 1960, and is not getting adequately replenished. Experts fear that this supply will soon get exhausted. What happens after that is anyone's guess.

India's water scarcity is made worse by high levels of pollution in water bodies in all major cities. According to We for Yamuna, an environmental group based in New Delhi, their city dumps 950 million gallons of sewage into the Yamuna river, which flows through the bustling metropolis. Out of this, only 5 percent is treated properly before it gets dumped into the Yamuna, which supplies 75 percent of Delhi's drinking water. Sewage disposals from New Delhi neighborhoods, industrial effluents, chemicals from farm runoffs, and arsenic and fluoride contamination have made the Yamuna water extremely poisonous for both consumption and irrigation, and experts agree that the river is clinically dead. Millions have been spent on "cleanup efforts," but no one knows where the money went...


India faces a serious water crisis, which, if it remains unattended, has the potential to threaten India's economic growth and create domestic instability and tension among its neighbors. The lack of water in the agricultural states has the potential to accelerate the demographic problem by hastening the migration of farm workers to urban centers, thus putting enormous pressure on city infrastructure. India's ballooning population, coupled with rapid industrialization, means that meeting the rising water demands will become an increasingly difficult task unless urgent steps are taken right away. Everyone agrees that building extensive canals by itself won't solve India's water woes. The first step, experts suggest, should be a massive public education scheme to teach people, especially wealthy farmers, the need for water conservation and thus reduce the per capita water consumption. On the policy front, India will have to take urgent steps to improve the management of water utilities and reduce wastage. In addition, technological innovation through further advances in desalinization, water recycling, deeper drilling, and water transportation techniques has to be stepped up. But these steps must be accompanied by traditional water-conservation means such as constructing water percolators to refill aquifers, switching to crops that need less irrigation water, reforesting hillsides, and restoring topsoil to increase the absorption of rainfall. Together, these steps will go a long way to alleviate the situation.

www.ipezone-blogspot.com/2007/07/indias-water-shortage.html=88k
 
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India on fire
Feb 1st 2007 | DELHI
From The Economist print edition

India's growth rate is close to China's; but signs of overheating suggest that this pace cannot be sustained
Corbis
THE economy is sizzling and foreign businessmen and investors are swarming to Bangalore and Mumbai to grab a piece of the action. India's year-on-year growth rate could well hit double figures at some point in 2007, and the country may even grow faster than China for at least one quarter. But things are so hot there is a big problem: India's current pace of expansion may not be sustainable.

On the face of it, the figures are compelling. India's real GDP grew by 9.2% in the year to last September (the latest numbers available). Over the past four years it has clocked up an average annual pace of more than 8%, compared with around 6% in the 1980s and 1990s—and a measly 3.5% during the three decades before 1980, when highly interventionist policies shackled the economy (see chart 1). India seems to be reaping the rewards of reforms that were made in the early 1990s. These massively lowered barriers to trade and liberalised capital markets. As a result, total trade in goods and services has leapt to 45% of GDP, from 17% in 1990.

Economic growth is likely to remain strong this year, driven by booming investment and consumption. The government's five-year plan to 2011-12 has an ambitious target of 9% average annual growth. Most Indian economists expect at least 8% over the next five years. Some, such as Surjit Bhalla, of Oxus Investments, think even 10% is feasible, thanks to a surge in investment.

Optimism is abundant. Indian businessmen were the most upbeat among 32 countries surveyed recently by Grant Thornton, a London-based accounting firm: 97% of the respondents were bullish about the future. Indians are rightly proud of the huge global success of firms such as Infosys, or of Tata Steel's £5.8 billion ($11.3 billion) acquisition of Britain's Corus this week. They point to new mobile-phone subscriptions, which are running at a higher monthly rate than in China, as evidence of their economy's vigour and modernity. But look again. Perhaps the only thing really growing faster in India than China is hype.

Recent visitors to Delhi were greeted by a poster campaign by the Times of India announcing “India poised”. But poised for what? The economy is displaying alarming symptoms of overheating. This implies that demand is outpacing supply and hence the pace of growth is unsustainable. Despite lower oil prices, wholesale-price inflation has risen to 6%, which is above the 5.5% upper limit set by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). India does not have a single rate of consumer-price inflation, but the crude average of the rates for industrial, non-manual and agricultural workers is above 7%. Capacity utilisation is higher than at any time in the past decade and severe skill shortages have caused wages to rocket.

The RBI is also concerned about a credit boom. Bank lending to firms and households has expanded by 30% over the past year. Lending on commercial property is up by 84% and home mortgages by 32%. Asset prices look bubbly. After rising more than fourfold over the past four years, India's stockmarket is one of the emerging world's most expensive, with a price-earnings ratio of more than 20. House prices in many big cities have more than doubled over the past two years.

Against this sweltering background, the RBI's interest-rate decision on January 31st looked timid. It raised its overnight lending rate by a quarter-point to 7.5%, but left the reverse repo rate (which it uses to drain excess liquidity from the banking system) unchanged at 6%. Over the past couple of years interest rates have risen by less than the rate of inflation, so they have fallen in real terms.

The inflation numbers probably understate the degree of overheating. When demand outpaces supply in an open economy it is more likely to show up in a current-account deficit than in inflation. India's deficit widened to more than 3% of GDP in the three months to September—a huge swing from a surplus of almost 4% in the first half of 2004. And the true gap between domestic demand and supply is even bigger. Yaga Venugopal Reddy, the RBI'S governor, recently drew attention to how India's current-account deficit is larger once you exclude the money sent home by Indians abroad. These remittances do not reflect domestic demand or supply, but are more like a capital inflow. Excluding workers' remittances, India's deficit is running close to 5% of GDP (see chart 2)—larger than the equivalent deficit during India's balance-of-payments crisis in the early 1990s.

Keeping up with demand
The risk of a financial crisis is slight, because India has the cushion of $180 billion of foreign-exchange reserves, which is equivalent to 11 months' imports, and its external debt is small. But this misses the point. The reason for concern about India's widening current-account deficit is not that it heralds a financial crisis, but that it is a signal of how supply cannot keep pace with red-hot demand.

Furthermore, unlike China and most other Asian emerging economies, India is heavily dependent on short-term portfolio capital inflows, rather than foreign direct investment, which is longer-term. Short-term capital has accounted for four-fifths of capital inflows into India over the past three-and-a-half years—although, encouragingly, foreign direct investment did pick up strongly last year. This means India is vulnerable to rising interest rates if there is a sharp reversal in the appetite for risk in global financial markets.

How fast can India grow? Most standard methods of estimating the trend—or potential—rate of growth (the maximum at which an economy can expand without triggering a rise in inflation) arrive at figures of around 7%. But business people, investors and an unusually large number of economists, are convinced that India is undergoing a “paradigm shift” and so backward-looking historical data are now irrelevant for assessing future growth.

India's capacity for growth has certainly increased over the past decade, thanks to earlier reforms. Yet given widespread signs that India is already exceeding its speed limit, there is a high risk that if the economy continues to grow at 9% or more, it will get ever hotter. Inflation will climb higher and financial imbalances will widen, running the risk of a hard landing. India has no genuinely independent central bank to put on the brakes. And policymakers are understandably reluctant to cool demand when India needs rapid growth to create jobs and reduce poverty.

An alternative to slowing demand is to boost supply by speeding up reforms and attacking the many bottlenecks caused by inadequate infrastructure, dreadful public services, skill shortages and rigid labour laws. But improving infrastructure and education not only takes time, it also requires money, and India's fiscal finances are far from healthy.

On the surface, the government has made great strides to cut its budget deficit. The IMF forecasts the deficit for central and state governments will fall to 6.2% of GDP in the fiscal year ending in March, slightly below budget and down from a peak of 10% in 2001-02. Some of the reduction is due to greater fiscal prudence and reduced tax evasion, but it also reflects a cyclical upswing in tax revenue on the back of the economic boom and low interest rates, thanks to the global liquidity glut. If interest rates rose because foreign investors lost their appetite for risk, or if the economy slowed, the budget deficit would widen.

It already looms dangerously large. Chetan Ahya, Morgan Stanley's economist in Mumbai, calculates that off-budget items, such as oil and power subsidies, amount to another 1.8% of GDP. This puts the total deficit closer to 8% of GDP, the biggest among the main emerging economies. India also has the highest ratio of public debt to GDP, at 80% (see chart 3).

The budget deficit could swell further over the next few years. Generous tax exemptions for exporters in special economic zones may erode future revenues. And the government's Sixth Pay Commission, due to report by April 2008, is likely to lead to a big rise in public-sector pay. Its predecessor's report marked the start of a sharp downturn in public finances; and the new recommendations will be implemented in 2009, an election year.

Again, the concern is not that India's public borrowing causes a financial crisis. Most of it is funded through domestic, not foreign, debt and controls on capital outflows ensure that domestic savers buy government bonds. The real problem is that India's weak fiscal position constrains its future growth by leaving no room for more public spending on infrastructure, education and health.

Leaving the farm
The growth optimists point to India's favourable demography. The population of working age will continue to rise for several decades, whereas in China it is expected to fall. This, it is argued, will boost India's workforce and both saving and investment. Furthermore, 60% of India's labour force is engaged in low productivity farming. As workers shift from agriculture to more productive jobs in industry and services, this will automatically boost GDP growth. Yet this assumes the newcomers will all find jobs. If those jobs do not appear, the so-called demographic dividend will more likely turn into a demographic disaster. Some 60% of the demographic bulge will come in five poor and badly governed states.

This is just one example of how economic commentators tend to confuse India's long-term potential (what is feasible provided the best policies are put in place) with its current potential (ie, non inflationary) growth rate. That India has huge long-term potential is undeniable, but without reforms the country cannot fully exploit it.

All agree that the biggest obstacle to growth of 9% or more is India's infrastructure—especially its lousy roads, ports and power. According to the World Bank, the average manufacturing firm loses 8% of sales each year from power cuts. India spends 4% of its GDP on infrastructure investment, compared with China's 9%. In absolute dollar terms, China spends seven times as much on its infrastructure.

India's government has ambitious plans to increase total infrastructure spending to 8% of GDP over the next five years. This will involve some increase in government spending, but the idea is for the bulk of it to be financed by public-private partnerships. That will be hard.

Private investors, especially foreign ones, still shy away from sectors like electricity and roads because they are uncertain of earning a reasonable return. Only about half of all electricity generated is paid for, because power is stolen and bills are left unpaid. Saumitra Chaudhuri, the economic adviser at ICRA, a credit-rating agency, argues that public-private partnerships first require regulatory reforms to protect the interests of both investors and consumers. As the World Bank put it in a report last year, “when systems are failing, it is not enough to fix the pipes, one needs to fix the institutions that fix the pipes.”

Another obstacle to growth in manufacturing is India's labour laws, which are among the most restrictive in the world. Firms employing more than 100 people cannot fire workers without government permission, which discourages expansion. Today's central government cannot scrap these laws because it relies on the support of the communist parties. In theory, the state governments can apply the laws more flexibly, especially in the special economic zones, but this is unlikely to lead to more flexible labour markets overnight.

A third big problem is the dreadful quality of public services, from education and health to the provision of water. Half of urban households lack drinking water within the home; one quarter have no access to a toilet, either public or private. Many public services in cities have worsened in recent years. In Bangalore water is now available for less than three hours a day, compared with 20 hours in the early 1980s. This may be another reason why workers are not moving in from rural areas as rapidly as in China.

Nor are young Indians equipped for more productive jobs in the towns. The quality of education and health care is dire. A survey in 2003 found that only half of paid teachers were actually teaching during school hours. Another survey found that government health centres in poor parts of Delhi had a more than 50% chance of prescribing a harmful therapy for common ailments.

Bizarrely, India has one of the most privatised health systems in the world. Government spending accounts for only 21% of total health spending. Likewise, in eight of 18 states studied more than half of all children in urban areas are in private schools. But this is not a model for free-market economics or the result of policy reform. People go private only because public services are so bad. Subir Gokarn, an economist at CRISIL, another credit-rating agency, worries that because the educated middle class do not use public services, there is less public outcry for reform than there should be.

Sadly, the prospects for dramatic change in the near future look slim. With a few exceptions, such as the partial opening of retailing to foreign investment and the privatisation of the two biggest airports, reforms have stalled since the government took office in 2004. Despite the reformist instincts of Manmohan Singh, the prime minister, the need to maintain the coalition overwhelms the appeal of reform.

Back to school
The supply-side constraints of infrastructure, labour laws and public services seem formidable, yet the vast majority of local economists in Delhi reckon that annual growth of at least 8% is sustainable even without further reform (with reform they look forward to 9% or more). A popular argument is that other Asian economies grew by 8-9% for long periods, so why not India? But East Asian economies invested much more in education and infrastructure than India does today.

A recent study from Goldman Sachs, which forecast that India could sustain 8% growth until 2020, was widely trumpeted in Indian newspapers. However, the bank's report clearly stated that this would require better education, labour market reforms and less red tape. Oddly, most newspapers failed to mention that.

Indeed, it is possible to detect a belief among some that it is now India's “right” to match China's growth rate of 10%. Even the finance minister, Palaniappan Chidambaram, has felt the need to remind people that present rates of growth are not “because some kind god smiled at us”. No country “deserves” rapid growth, unless it puts in place the right policies. The biggest danger of today's rampant economic optimism is that it could breed complacency about the need for reforms. That would be a sure recipe for a future slowdown.

India needs faster growth to create more jobs for its expanding population and to make it easier to relieve poverty. The awkward truth is that although the economy is sprinting ahead, most people are only crawling. Although the educated middle class has enjoyed big salary increases and a surge in the value of their homes and shares, the 60% of the population close to or below the poverty line have not yet seen a material gain.

Measured by the commonly used gini coefficient, India has less income inequality than China or America. But it has much more poverty. Some 260m people still live on the equivalent of less than $1 a day. Half of all children under five are malnourished. India needs rapid growth. But by itself that is not sufficient to end poverty, warns Rajiv Kumar, the director of ICRIER, an economic research institute. Better infrastructure and education are needed to make the rural poor more mobile so they have an escape route. In this way, better infrastructure and improved public services can not only increase growth, but also spread the rewards.

To boost sustainable growth, India needs to clear the path ahead rather than risk running an economy beyond its safe maximum speed. Indians are understandably eager for their economy to sprint like a tiger rather than amble along like an elephant. Yet few animals have an elephant's stamina or can travel as far in a day—provided its way is not blocked.

www.economist.com
 
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'Untouchables' left behind in booming nationBy Emily Wax, Washington Post | July 5, 2007

DALLIPUR, India -- The hip young Indians working inside this country's multinational call centers have one thing in common: Almost all hail from India's upper and middle castes, elites in this highly stratified society.

India may be booming, but not for those who occupy the lowest rung of society. The Dalits, once known as untouchables, continue to live in grinding poverty and suffer discrimination in education, jobs, and healthcare. For them, status and often occupation are still predetermined in the womb.

While some Indians had hoped urbanization and growth would crumble ideas about caste, observers say tradition and prejudice have ultimately prevailed.

"There's talk of a modern India. But the truth is India can't truly move ahead with caste in place," said Chandra Bhan Prasad, a Dalit writer and specialist on India's caste system. "In all ways, it's worse than the Jim Crow laws were in the American South because it's completely sanctioned by religion. Despite so many reforms, the idea of untouchability is still very much a part of Indian life."

As India's economy surges, one of the country's most serious and stubborn challenges is how to combat entrenched caste prejudice. Dalits, along with other "backward" castes, make up the majority of India's 1.1 billion people, and social scientists worry that these groups are being left behind.

The contrast between the gleaming call centers of rising India and the abject poverty that is the reality for many Dalits is all too obvious in Dallipur, an impoverished village on the outskirts of Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh state.

Without electricity, paved roads or running water, the hamlet is home to landless Mushars, the lowest social stratum of Dalits, who work as shoe shiners, trash pickers, toilet cleaners, and street sweepers.

Amid the straw and mud villages, two children died of starvation last year -- not for lack of food in the area, but as a result of prejudice.

Chandrika, a 24-year-old Dalit mother, recalled carrying her crying 2-year-old son and her weak 20-month-old daughter to a nearby health center. There, she pleaded for a card that would allow her malnourished children to receive free milk.

But before the nurses could examine her children, she was mocked and shooed away by doctors, who told the young mother to go beg in the market.

"They said again and again, 'We don't want to see you Dalits here bothering us,' " said Chandrika, a thin, dark-skinned woman who wept as she recounted how her children died. "My milk had dried up from stress. There was no work for me. There was no one to hear my plight."

Local government leaders who came to investigate her children's deaths insisted that the shy mother and her fellow villagers build a raised concrete stage -- Dalits could be addressed by upper castes only from a higher platform, Chandrika and other villagers were told. The 3-foot-tall dais remains in Dallipur today, the only outcome of the investigation.

By virtue of birth, some castes inherit wealth; the Dalits inherit debt.

Caste often determines Indians' spouses, friends, residence and, most important, occupation -- part of a Hindu belief that people inherit their stations in life based on the sins and good deeds of past lives.

Some Indians believe that the spread of capitalism in urban areas has in some ways dissolved caste by creating new occupations and eliminating obsolete ones. For instance, with the growing use of flush toilets in Indian cities, the disposal of human waste, once a job for Dalits, is now done with a simple pull of a lever.

In booming evening bazaars in Mumbai and New Delhi, lower castes sell cellphones, leather tennis shoes, and grooming kits from small shops and curbside pushcarts alongside higher castes, with everyone "in a capitalist rush to make money," said Prasad, the writer. "A lower-caste businessman may even enjoy an evening cigarette with a higher caste, completely taboo even 50 years ago."

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh recently compared India's caste system to apartheid in South Africa, calling it not just prejudice but "a blot on humanity."

Critics say that such statements are simply meant to garner votes from lower castes and that any gains made by Dalits have been marginal.

"India is not a true democracy," said Anup Srivastava, a researcher with the People's Vigilance Commission on Human Rights in Varanasi who is investigating complaints filed by Dalits about discrimination among neighbors, in schools, at hospitals and at work. "The country is independent. But the people aren't. How can there be a democracy when there are still people known as untouchables who face daily discrimination?"

www.boston.com
 
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How will India cope with skill shortages?
Here are some recent figures released by Ficci on the terrible shortage of people that India will face in the coming five years … some hard numbers:

Biotechnology sector: 80 percent shortfall of doctorate and post doctorate scientists.

Food processing sector: 65 per cent shortfall of refrigeration mechanics, electricians etc. 70 percent shortfall of food safety personnel.

Health sector: Shortage of 5 lakh ( half a million) doctors – in particular anaesthetists, radiologists, gynaecologists and surgeons (particularly neurosurgeons). Also, a shortage of 10 lakh (1 million) nurses.

IT sector : Shortage of 5 lakhs (half a million) engineers.

Education sector: Faculty shortage of 25-40 percent.

Banking and Finance sector: 50-80 percent personnel shortage.

Aviation sector: Severe shortage of pilots.

Textile sector: Will create 10 lakhs (1 million) jobs in the next few years due to rapid expansion.

Pharma sector: Severe shortage of top pharma scientists as research expenditure by pharma companies has quadrupled in the last 5 years. Thus there is a shortage of middle-level and junior scientists too. This has made salaries of top pharma scientists rise to US levels.

Semi-skilled and skilled labour: The shortage of factory workers and construction labourers is already being felt across industries.

Action Plan of the government:
This is what the government has done/planned, and explained by the PM in a recent speech:

As per recommendations of the Knowledge Commission, by 2015, India should attain a gross enrollment ratio (in higher educational instituions) of at least 15 percent if we are to be in line with most modern societies. Such a quantum jump in our university system has to be well planned and well funded… our Government has started new national institutions in the fields of science, technology and medicine. In the last 100 years, we have had only one Indian Institute of Science. In past two years, we have sanctioned six more. We have opened new national institutes in medical sciences, engineering and management…we intend to establish 30 new Central Universities across the country. The work on the modalities for setting these up has begun and the Ministry of Human resource Development, the UGC and the Planning Commission are working to operationalize this in the next 2-3 months. This expansion is going to be a landmark in expanding access to high quality education across the country.

Hope for the hundreds of eager youngsters in schools today. They will (hopefully) not suffer the same fate as present generations who have had far fewer opportunities to get into good quality educational institutions.

It’s quality that people are concerned about. Why, last Saturday a girl killed herself, not because she didn’t get admission into college, but because she didn’t get admission into a college of her choice. And this poor girl wasn’t even trying for a professional seat in an engineering or medical college, she was trying for a seat in the 11th grade!!

Just take the example of our medical education. Its in shambles. Hundreds of hopefuls cannot get a medical education in India because of the ridiculously high level of competition. There are just too few seats in the reputed government colleges (their fees are affordable.) And as for private colleges, they are beyond the reach of the middle classes and its not just because of their tuition fees. Lakhs of rupees are taken as ‘donations’ and so unless you are academically brilliant or rich, you can forget about being a doctor.

And as for our primary education, the less said the better. Its in terrible shape (government schools) and I know intelligent children who live in the slums who have little hope of even grabbing jobs of sales people or even telephone operaters because of the poor education they are being imparted today. These millions of children are destined to languish in the slums even when they are adults…its just sad!


Why are the Indians living abroad not coming back in droves?
I think of this frequently, perhaps because some cousins who I felt close to have gone forever and so have several of my very good friends.

Now that our economy has improved, why can’t people like them, people who are educated, try to come back? Educated people in India can get good jobs and a decent standard of living, though not as high as they might get abroad. Some feel the trend is reversing…but I think it’s more because the western countries are becoming more stringent about immigration, green cards, citizenship etc. Those Indians who do return voluntarily either do it because they want their children to grow up here or because of the responsibility of old parents.

The truth is that few people feel they can adjust to a life in India after living for years abroad. Its more than just about physical comforts and money. It could be a more professional environment at work, or it could be just being able to get things done more quickly and professionally over there. Whether it’s getting a licence or a cinema ticket!

And from what I hear from some of my younger cousins who have migrated, they are happier there because there are no relatives to interfere in their life, be it in-laws, parents or aunts and uncles. You can lead a completely independent life out there, which is in stark contrast to life here. I don’t know how important a factor this is for people who make the final decision to live in a foreign country, but I would really like to know.

Ofcourse, every individual has a right to carve a better life for themselves…but the reality is that India needs these people to come back. With their international exposure, their contribution will be invaluable to India. Don’t those who live abroad want to be part of India’s growth, even if they have to pay a price for it?

Update: I wrote this post early morning and therefore missed the news item that appeared today in DNA. It says that a faculty shortage is hampering the growth of IIM and this “dearth of teaching staff” is impeding the institutes’ entry into the top B-schools of the world. Apparently there are government restrictions on salaries and therefore the schools find it a struggle to attract the best talent. Again its not quantity, but the quality which matters to the IIM’s and they are simply not getting enough of the best.

(Statistics from Hindustantimes.com and Mumbaimirror.com)

www.nitawriter.wordpress.com
 
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Ugly face of the knowledge economy
With the basic issues of quality, equity and access to higher education in India still unresolved, the country is ill prepared to generate knowledge creators or workers of the highest quality. If the current trends are any indication, reliance on the market forces is further aggrevating the crisis, writes N Raghuram.

Combat Law, Vol. 5, Issue 1 - Higher education in India is gasping for breath, at a time when India is aiming to be an important player in the emerging knowledge economy. With about 300 universities and deemed universities, over 15,000 colleges and hundreds of national and regional research institutes, Indian higher education and research sector is the third largest in the world, in terms of the number of students it caters to. However, not a single Indian university finds even a mention in a recent international ranking of the top 200 universities of the world, except an IIT ranked at 41, whereas there were three universities each from China, Hong Kong and South Korea and one from Taiwan.

On the other hand, it is also true that there is no company or institute in the world that has not benefited by graduates, post-graduates or Ph.D.s from India: be it NASA, IBM, Microsoft, Intel, Bell, Sun, Harvard, MIT, Caltech, Cambridge or Oxford, and not all those students are products of our IITs, IIMs IISc/TIFR or central universities, which cater to barely one per cent of the Indian student population. This is not to suggest that we should pat our backs for the achievements of our students abroad, but to point out that Indian higher educational institutions have not been able to achieve the same status for themselves as their students seem to achieve elsewhere with their education from here.

While many reasons can be cited for this situation, they all boil down to decades of feudally managed, colonially modelled institutions run with inadequate funding and excessive political interference. Only about 10 per cent of the total student population enters higher education in India, as compared to over 15 per cent in China and 50 per cent in the major industrialised countries. Higher education is largely funded by the state and central governments so far, but the situation is changing fast. Barring a few newly established private universities, the government funds most of the universities, whereas at the college level, the balance is increasingly being reversed.

The privatisation experience

The experience over the last few decades has clearly shown that unlike school education, privatisation has not led to any major improvements in the standards of higher education and professional education. Yet, in the run up to the economic reforms in 1991, the IMF, world bank and the countries that control them have been crying hoarse over the alleged pampering of higher education in India at the cost of school education. The fact of the matter was that school education was already privatised to the extent that government schools became an option only to those who cannot afford private schools mushrooming in every street corner, even in small towns and villages. On the other hand, in higher education and professional courses, relatively better quality teaching and infrastructure has been available only in government colleges and universities, while private institutions of higher education in India capitalised on fashionable courses with minimum infrastructure.

Nevertheless, successive governments over the last two decades have only pursued a path of privatisation and deregulation of higher education, regardless of which political party ran the government. From the Punnaiah committee on reforms in higher education set up by the Narasimha Rao government to the Birla-Ambani committee set up by the Vajpayee government, the only difference is in their degree of alignment to the market forces and not in the fundamentals of their recommendations.

With the result, the last decade has witnessed many sweeping changes in higher and professional education: For example, thousands of private colleges and institutes offering IT courses appeared all across the country by the late 1990s and disappeared in less than a decade, with devastating consequences for the students and teachers who depended on them for their careers. This situation is now repeating itself in management, biotechnology, bioinformatics and other emerging areas. No one asked any questions about opening or closing such institutions, or bothered about whether there were qualified teachers at all, much less worry about teacher-student ratio, floor area ratio, class rooms, labs, libraries etc. All these regulations that existed at one time (though not always enforced strictly as long as there were bribes to collect) have now been deregulated or softened under the self-financing scheme of higher and professional education adopted by the UGC in the 9th five-year plan and enthusiastically followed by the central and state governments.

In the run up to the economic reforms in 1991, the IMF, world bank and the countries that control them have been crying hoarse over the alleged pampering of higher education in India at the cost of school education. The fact of the matter was that school education was already privatised to the extent that government schools became an option only to those who cannot afford private schools mushrooming in every street corner.

This situation reached its extreme recently in the new state of Chattisgarh, where over 150 private universities and colleges came up within a couple of years, till the scam got exposed by a public interest litigation and the courts ordered the state government in 2004 to derecognise and close most of these universities or merge them with the remaining recognized ones. A whole generation of students and teachers are suffering irreparable damage to their careers due to these trends, for no fault of theirs. Even government-funded colleges and universities in most states started many "self-financing" courses in IT, biotechnology etc., without qualified teachers, labs or infrastructure and charging huge fees from the students and are liberally giving them marks and degrees to hide their inadequacies.

It is not that the other well established departments and courses in government funded colleges and universities are doing any better. Decades of government neglect, poor funding, frequent ban on faculty recruitments and promotions, reduction in library budgets, lack of investments in modernization leading to obsolescence of equipment and infrastructure, and the tendency to start new universities on political grounds without consolidating the existing ones today threatens the entire higher education system.

Another corollary of this trend is that an educational institution recognized in a particular state need not limit its operations to that state. This meant that universities approved by the governments of Chattisgarh or Himachal Pradesh can set up campuses in Delhi or NOIDA, where they are more likely to get students from well off families who can afford their astronomical fees. What is more, they are not even accountable to the local governments, since their recognition comes from a far away state. Add to this a new culture of well-branded private educational institutions allowing franchisees at far away locations to run their courses, without being responsible to the students or teachers in any other way. This is increasingly becoming a trend with foreign universities, especially among those who do not want to set up their own shop here, but would like to benefit from the degree-purchasing power of the growing upwardly mobile economic class of India. Soon we might see private educational institutions getting themselves listed in the stock market and soliciting investments in the education business on the slogan that its demand will never see the sunset.

The economics of imparting higher education are such that, barring a few courses in arts and humanities, imparting quality education in science, technology, engineering, medicine etc. requires huge investments in infrastructure, all of which cannot be recovered through student fees, without making higher education inaccessible to a large section of students. Unlike many better-known private educational institutions in Western countries that operate in the charity mode with tuition waivers and fellowships (which is one reason why our students go there), most private colleges and universities in India are pursuing a profit motive. This is the basic reason for charging huge tuition fees, apart from forced donations, capitation fees and other charges. Despite huge public discontent, media interventions and many court cases, the governments have not been able to regulate the fee structure and donations in these institutions. Even the courts have only played with the terms such as payment seats, management quotas etc., without addressing the basic issue of fee structure.

It is not only students but also teachers who are at the receiving end of the ongoing transformation in higher education. The nation today witnesses the declining popularity of teaching as a profession, not only among the students that we produce, but also among parents, scientists, society and the government. The teaching profession today attracts only those who have missed all other "better" opportunities in life, and is increasingly mired in bureaucratic controls and anti-education concepts such as "hours" of teaching "load", "paid-by-the-hour", "contractual" teachers etc. With privatisation reducing education to a commodity, teachers are reduced to tutors and teaching is reduced to coaching. The consumerist boom and the growing salary differentials between teachers and other professionals and the value systems of the emerging free market economy have made teaching one of the least attractive professions that demands more work for less pay. Yet, the society expects teachers not only to be inspired but also to do an inspiring job!

Deemed universities - a national debate needed

Yet another worrisome trend in higher education and research is the emerging government policy of according deemed university status to national labs and research institutes, so that these institutes can award their own Ph.D. degrees, without having to affiliate themselves to a university or fulfilling any other role of being a university. National laboratories include those under the Union government's Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), Department of Atomic Energy (DAE), Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), Department of Space (DOS) etc. Some DAE institutions have already obtained deemed university status, and the UGC has already recommended the case of CSIR for the commission's approval. It is not clear whether all the national laboratories are under consideration for this status, but it is most likely that all of them would eventually like to seek such a status.

The national laboratories were specifically established with the aim of making more direct contributions to the technological needs of the country in chosen areas such as medicine, agriculture, petroleum, metallurgy, energy, defence, space etc. It was expected that these national (or regional) laboratories would employ selected scientific manpower generated from the colleges/universities and nurture their talents towards specific applied goals. But this did not happen, as the national labs became more sophisticated versions of university departments drawing better monetary and infrastructural support and publishing research papers, for which they need research students, who cannot be retained and tapped unless they are promised research degrees. The present demand for seeking deemed university status could therefore be an exercise to legitimise the current situation of the national labs, and redefine their original goals.

However, the country needs to decide whether it wants to develop glorified technicians and sycophants or make versatile scientists and conscious citizens. Barring a few exceptions, the monolithic hierarchy of national labs does not provide enough opportunity to young researchers to relate their research to broader social and national values. The more open intellectual environment of universities, which include natural and social sciences, is essential for interdisciplinary learning, personality development, national values and better citizenship. Thus, the issue of deemed universities calls for an open national debate, as it has major implications for our higher education and research in science and technology.

With the basic issues of equity and access to higher education still unresolved, the country is ill prepared to generate knowledge creators or knowledge workers of high quality to tap the opportunities of the emerging knowledge economy. There was a time when the country debated passionately about external brain drain of students going abroad and not returning, and internal brain drain of students taking up careers in areas quite different from their academic backgrounds, and what a waste of national resource this was. This situation has only worsened, with unemployment and underemployment in the era of liberalisation and globalisation, but we don't seem to even talk about it anymore.

Reforms may mean different things to different people, but for those students and teachers who are at the receiving end of their governments, reforms have come to mean withdrawal of government funding, no matter what happens. For those who believed that reforms in higher education would reduce bureaucratic controls, attract better talent, provide more operational freedom, improve transparency, increase accountability, remove corruption, encourage self-financing, reward productivity and punish laxity, to say that they are disappointed at the state of affairs in our country is an understatement.


N Raghuram
Combat Law, Volume 5, Issue 1
(published 15 March 2006 in India Together)

The author is Reader, School of Biotechnology, GGS Indraprastha University, Delhi.

www.indiatogather.com
 
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GDP expected to grow at 9.2 % in 07/08: CII

New Delhi, July 15: Indian economy is expected to show a marginal decline in GDP growth to 9.2 percent in the current fiscal from 9.4 percent in 2006-07 with services sector and industry maintaining the momentum, CII has said.

According to the chamber, the agriculture sector would show a moderate three per cent growth, against 2.7 percent in 2006-07.

Industry and services sector are expected to grow at 9.4 percent and 11.2 percent respectively during 2007-08.

"On the whole, CII expects the GDP growth to be 9.2 percent during 2007-08, with agriculture growing at 3 percent, industry at 9.4 percent and services at 11.2 percent," the chamber said in its 'state of the economy' report.

The Indian economy had registered a 9.4 percent GDP growth in 2006-07, highest in the last 18 years, due to a stellar performance by manufacturing and services sectors.

In its quarterly analysis of economy for the Jan-March period, the chamber said in spite of appreciating rupee impacting exports, country's GDP grew at 9.1 percent primarily led by 19.35 percent growth in corporate earnings.

It said appreciating rupee had a negative impact on profits of textile and leather sectors during the fourth quarter with profit margin expected to erode further to 10.4 per cent during the next six months.

Service sector companies registered a 45.68 percent growth in profits compared to 10.32 percent growth in the corresponding quarter last fiscal. Manufacturing sector, however, reported a slowdown in profits during the quarter to 7.91 percent from 15.17 percent in Q4 2005-06.

The chamber, however, cautioned that the continuous decline in oilseed production could act as a hurdle to agricultural growth in the country.

Oilseeds production has declined by 14.79 percent in the quarter under review which is expected to further increase the demand-supply gap for edible oils.

CII pointed out on the need to restructure domestic pricing policy of various crops as farmers are switching from oilseeds crops to more lucrative alternatives like wheat and gram.
 
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Crop prodn to rise by 2.6 %, food grains 0.9 % in FY 08: CMIE

Mumbai, July 15: Despite the initial slowdown in sowing due to lower than expected rainfall in June 2007, crop production is likely to rise by 2.6 percent in FY 08 as against the meagre 0.9 percent increase this fiscal.

However, food grain production is projected to grow by a marginal 0.9 percent to 214-million tonnes in FY 08 as compared with 211.8-million tonnes in FY 07, the Centre for Monitoring of Indian Economy (CMIE) said in its monthly review of the Indian economy here.

The higher growth in crop production largely reflects the recovery in oilseeds production during the year. Its production is projected at 26.9-million tonnes in FY 08, up by 16 percent as against the 23.3-million tonnes produced in FY 07, the report said.

Food grains production may show a little improvement due to a marginal increase in rice and wheat production. In FY 08, rice production is projected to see a marginal 0.2 percent increase over last year's 91-million tonnes while wheat production is projected to go up to 74.2-million tonnes in FY 07.

Meanwhile, sowing for the Kharif season has begun successfully in several states. Till June 2007, the area under food grains, oil seeds, cotton and sugarcane added up to 127.6- lakh hectares.

This level of acreage was lower by nine percent as compared to the 140.5-lakh hectares sown during the same month a year ago. The slow pace of sowing attributed to the poor progress of monsoon in the early weeks of June.

In the first and second week of June, rainfall was lower than the long period average by 39 percent and 12 percent respectively. In the subsequent week, the monsoon has made rapid progress.

By July 4, it covered the entire country and to date, total rainfall was 20 percent above LPA and 27 percent higher than the rainfall in the same period of FY 06. Thus, the pace of sowing was expected to accelerate in July, it said.

Till June 2007, except cotton, acreage of all the crops was lower than the year-ago level. Cereal was sown over 55.3 lakh hectares as of June 28 as against 63.8 lakh hectares sown a year ago. Area sown of all cereal crops was down.

Rice, the major Kharif crop, was sown over an area of 31.6 lakh hectares as on June 28, as compared to 34.3 lakh hectares covered a year ago. However, as the intensity of flood subsides in states, the progress of sowing is expected to see a rapid improvement, CMIE said.

Oilseeds sowing was also down till June 27 as compared to a year-ago level. Groundnuts and soya bean are the major oilseed Kharif crops. Sowing of these crops was poor. Groundnut covered 6-lakh hectares as of June 29 as compared to 8.2-lakh hectares during the same period last year.

Groundnut sowing lagged behind in Gujarat on account of poor rain in the early weeks of monsoon followed by heavy rains which caused floods. Till June, area sown under groundnuts in Gujarat was significantly lower at 1.91 lakh hectares as against 4.38 lakh hectares covered a year ago.
 
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India Inc goes Dutch!
14 Jul, 2007, 1638 hrs IST,
Gaurie Mishra, TNN

NEW DELHI: India Inc. has found a new hunting ground to satiate its ever-increasing hunger for cross-border acquisition and this time it’s Holland. ABN Amro M&A executives say as many as three deals each worth $500 million are being negotiated by Indian companies.

“We are in discussions with many of our Indian clients regarding non-domestic M&A opportunities, including those in the Dutch market. Currently, there are at least 2-3 Dutch opportunities that are being investigated by some of our Indian clients. Deals that are being targeted would likely be in excess of $500 million,” said ABN Amro’s M&A advisory executive director Remco Van Der Pol.

Consumer products, IT, pharmaceuticals and manufacturing are the sectors where Indian companies are evaluating the deals. Though a time frame has not been fixed, experts say, the deals could be struck in the next 8-10 months. Dutch companies too are looking at entering India.

But while Indian companies are planning to use M&As as entry vehicles, Dutch companies are looking at the joint venture route for entering the country for the simple reason that not many domestic companies are on sale.

With the current boom in the Indian economy and prospects for even higher growth, not many Indian companies are up for sale. “Dutch companies tend to be quite open to any kind of cooperation with Indian companies as long as it adds value to their business. Joint ventures could occur in retailing, real estate and seeds,” added Mr Pol.

Though Europe is where a lot of Indian companies are striking deals, Holland is a new territory. Recently, there have been large cross-border deals where Indian companies have snapped up their European counterparts. Tata Steel bought Anglo Dutch company for $12 billion.

Suzlon acquired German company RE Power for $1.6 billion. Incidentally, ABN Amro was one of the co-advisors in the Suzlon-RE Power transaction. The total value of cross border M&A transactions that Indian companies has also risen sharply in the last two years.

In the first half of 2007, M&A deals worth $45 billion have been struck, of which 90% are crossborder transactions. In 2006, value of M&A deals was $40 billion, with cross border accounting for 80% of the total value. In 2005, value of M&A deals was worth $26 billion, with 50% being cross-border transactions.
 
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Tatas eyeing USD 50 bn turnover by FY08
15 Jul 2007, 2000 hrs IST,PTI

MUMBAI: Tata Group expects to more than double its turnover to USD 50 billion this fiscal with the acquisition of Anglo-Dutch steel firm Corus.

"We should touch the USD 50 billion turnover mark in FY08. With a 30 per cent growth this year, our USD 22 billion turnover in FY07 will become USD 28 billion in FY08. Corus would bring in an additional turnover of USD 22-23 billion," a top Tata official said on Sunday.

All these together "we should well cross the USD 50 billion turnover mark by FY08," the official said.

The Ratan Tata-led corporate major is also betting big on its inter national businesses, which are expected to contribute 50 per cent of the total turnover in 2008, he said.

In 2006-07, the international business contributed only 30 per cent of the USD 22 billion turnover, which worked out to USD 6.7 billion.

With acquisition of Corus the international business will account for 50 per cent of the total turnover, the official said.
 
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