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Indian Rupee hits historic low: Now Rs 67.23 = 1 Dollar

LOL you dumbass, India's per capita GDP is 1500 while Pakistan's is 1300. We are growing at 5% while your failure of an economy is growing at 3%. You are never going to catch up in a million years. Meanwhile , for the Bangladeshis that are jumping around, their GDP remains at $850. They will be lucky to catch up with Sub Saharan Africa :lol:

Indians are 1.3 billion and not 1 billion. :woot:
 
India’s demographic challenge

Wasting time

India’s demographic challenge

India will soon have a fifth of the world’s working-age population. It urgently needs to provide them with better jobs

May 11th 2013 | PATNA, BIHAR |From the print edition

ONE of India’s bigger private-sector employers can be found in Patna, the capital of Bihar, a poor, populous state in the east of the country. Narendra Kumar Singh, the boss, has three gold rings on his right hand and arms big enough to crush rocks. His firm, Frontline, has 86,000 people on its books. They are mostly unskilled men from rural areas in poor states like Bihar; thanks to Mr Singh they have jobs in cities all over India.

There is lots to celebrate about this. Mr Singh’s business has sales of $185m and its employee base has grown by 1,600% since 2000. He is looking for a Western partner and wants to expand to Sri Lanka and Bangladesh. He is providing paid work for part of the large cohort of young people now entering the workforce. And by shifting people from farms to cities he is helping urbanisation of the sort that underpinned startling progress elsewhere in Asia.

Yet Frontline is also a symptom of a colossal failure. For it is not supplying labour for a manufacturing boom of the kind that helped so many in China, South Korea and Taiwan out of poverty, or for the IT services at which India has excelled. Instead it offers relatively unproductive service-sector jobs—in particular, security guards. It has become de rigueur for every ATM, office, shop and apartment building to have guards. Across India millions of young men now sit all day on plastic seats in badly fitting uniforms with braids and epaulettes, unshaven and catatonically bored as the economic miracle passes by. This isn’t how East Asia got rich.

From a bomb to a boom and back

During the boom of the 1990s and 2000s, it became fashionable to talk of India’s forthcoming “demographic dividend”. This was quite a turnaround. In the 1960s and 1970s, the booming populations of states like Bihar were seen as a curse. “The Population Bomb”, a Malthusian bestseller by two American environmentalists, Paul and Anne Ehrlich, began by describing “one stinking hot night in Delhi”, and its horrifying number of “people, people, people, people”. In the 1970s there was a forced sterilisation programme. Sanjay Gandhi, a thuggish scion of the ruling dynasty, organised vasectomy camps near Delhi—one doctor boasted he could perform 40 sterilisations an hour.


In the 1990s, though, economic liberalisers evoked the experiences of East Asia and the demographic dividend it benefited from when previously high fertility rates began to decline. Working-age populations rose at the same time as the ratio of dependants to workers fell. An associated rise in the rate of saving allowed more investment, helping pay for the vast expansion in manufacturing that employed those workers and lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty. In the mid2000s the prospect of a similar dividend in India, where the fertility rate had dropped a lot in the 1980s and 1990s, was a key reason for investors’ optimism. The timing was particularly encouraging: India’s labour force was due to soar as China’s began to decline (see chart 1).


Now many are worried that India is squandering this demographic opportunity. This is partly because the economy is in a funk. Growth is at 4.5%, half the rate at the peak in the mid-2000s. Industry is 27% of output, compared with 40-47% in other big developing Asian economies. High inflation has prompted households to store ever more of their savings in physical assets rather than the financial system (see chart 2). The costs are clear. With few manufacturing exports, India has a chronic balance-of-payments problem. And India has created too few formal jobs in the past decade.

India’s leaders have long said they are committed to employment, but have shown little stomach for the economic upheaval rapid job creation entails. China’s policymakers accepted that the process of adding jobs overall often destroyed jobs in particular industries and places. For years India’s politicians have preferred economic palliatives such as NREGA, a giant scheme that guarantees work for the rural poor, and subsidies for the needy.

Now India’s borrowing has soared to queasy levels and welfare spending is being squeezed. There are worries that joblessness could be feeding the spasmodic unrest seen in some cities since 2011. Not all protesters were young. And their motivation varied from support for the anti-corruption guru Anna Hazare to disgust at a series of rapes in Delhi. But the protests added to a sense of youthful volatility.

An official report into the public finances in 2012 warned that a combination of slower growth and the demographic bulge could be “politically destabilising”. Rahul Gandhi, who is poised to lead the ruling Congress party in the general election due by 2014, speaks of the “angry” young and their “urgent demand for jobs”. The government’s economic adviser, Raghuram Rajan, says jobs are the biggest priority. Some in the elite seem to be waking up. But is it too late?

Quantity and quality

To see the scale of the challenge, consider that the working-age population, aged between 15 and 64, will rise by 125m over the coming decade, and by a further 103m over the following decade. On current trends a third of the growth will come from poorer and less literate states in the north, notably Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.

Not everyone of working age will be in the job market. More people aged 15-24 will remain in education—26% do today. Some adult women will stay at home; presently only about a third work, a low level by Asian standards. But India probably needs to create about 100m net new jobs in the next decade.

China’s boom created 130m net jobs in services and industry between 2002 and 2012. But India is no China. The most recent survey showed no net new jobs were created between 2004-05 and 2009-10, a dramatic slowdown on the previous five years, when 60m jobs were created.

These figures may not be as shocking as they seem. Fewer jobs were created partly because some folk voluntarily withdrew from the workforce. More women in rural areas decided not to look for jobs—perhaps because several fairly good years for farmers meant they did not need the cash. Wages for the unskilled have been rising, and though this is partly because of the NREGA guaranteed-work scheme, it suggests there has not been a collapse in the jobs market. For all these caveats, though, the headline data remain disquieting. Even during a boom few jobs were created. Now that the economy is growing more slowly things have got harder.

The rural poor seem likely to be frustrated, which will add to the number of migrants headed for the cities. The better-educated will suffer, too. By some estimates India produces twice as many new graduates each year as it can absorb. In a half-built private-run campus in Patna most students have modest expectations of their future salaries—typically $500 a month. Even so, their professor worries they won’t all get job offers.

The problem lies not just in the quantity of jobs, though; quality matters too. Statistics verify what the naked eye can see in any Indian city. They all have their armies of guards, peons, delivery boys, ear-dewaxers and men who sit on stools in lifts pressing the buttons. About 85% of India’s jobs are with “informal” enterprises—those organisations with fewer than ten staff which are not incorporated. Another 11% are casual jobs with formal companies. Only 16% of Indians say they get a regular wage. People with informal jobs are usually very poor. An official study of 2004-05 data concludes that 80% of informal workers got less than the then national minimum wage of $1.46 a day. There are some good jobs. But India’s IT firms, for example, account for only a few million jobs out of a total of half a billion.

All this seems to be closely linked to the lack of manufacturing. Although some 23% of Indian workers are categorised as working in “industry”, compared to nearly 30% in China and 22% in Indonesia, half of India’s “industrial” workers are in construction whereas the figure is just a quarter in Indonesia. Of the remainder almost all are in the “manufacturing” subcategory. But these are not jobs that involve exposure to modern machinery, techniques and training (crucial for unskilled labour let down by the country’s education system). More than half of Indians in the manufacturing sector work in facilities without electricity.

The obvious problem is a “missing middle”. Most of the jobs are in tiny operations. Most of the value added is in a few big, sophisticated firms that prefer using machines to humans. Some, such as Tata Sons and Mahindra, are well-known. Most of those seem keener on expanding globally than on building factories at home. For every dollar of foreign direct investment (FDI) made by outsiders in Indian manufacturing in the five years to March 2012, local firms invested 65 cents in manufacturing abroad. The number of jobs in factories (excluding the very smallest) has increased since 2005; but only by 2.8m.


What manufacturing FDI India does attract tends to be high-end—Volkswagen has a smart €570m plant full of robots. Meanwhile investment is pouring into Vietnam and Indonesia (see chart 3) as costs in China rise. Li & Fung, a big trading firm based in Hong Kong which buys goods in Asia and sells them in the West to retailers including Walmart, gets some 5% of its goods from India, compared with about 20% from South-East Asia.

Death on the shop floor

India’s missed opportunity is most evident in textiles and clothing, a labour-intensive industry that has been dominated by China. In 2011 McKinsey, a consultancy, found that purchasing managers at global clothing firms wanted to shift their sourcing from China; their favoured new destinations included Bangladesh, Vietnam, Indonesia and Cambodia—but not India. India’s textile exports have grown, but those from Vietnam and Bangladesh, combined, easily outstrip them.

Why don’t more people want to make things in India? Indian migrant workers are sought across the world, not least in the Gulf. But at home tricky labour relations are a problem.

In a dusty lawyers’ room in the industrial belt near Delhi, five workers explain how they were fired by Maruti Suzuki, a carmaker controlled by Suzuki of Japan, after simmering tensions on the shop floor led to a riot at a nearby plant in July 2012. A manager was burned to death. The men are in their 20s and from rural families. They have a strong sense of injustice. “We have told our families that they should consider us as behind bars and that they should make other plans for their lives. We are ready for a long fight.” The Maruti violence has so far been a one-off. But the episode unnerved businesspeople.

Economists have long identified arcane labour laws as the key to India’s manufacturing problem. Scholars have gleefully dissected India’s 51 central and 170 state labour statutes, some of which pre-date independence, to demonstrate how they make it hard for firms with more than a handful of staff to fire people and allow disputes to become legal endurance tests. Studies have shown how tighter rules impede growth in labour-intensive industries and prompt firms to remain small.

Two-tier world

Yet the industrial belt in which Maruti’s factory sits shows times have changed. Big firms can bypass labour law by using “contract” workers, technically employed by third-party agents. In the past decade they have used—or, workers say, abused—this kink in the rules a lot more. At three car and motorbike plants, based on discussions with workers, about 70% of 14,500 staff work on a contract basis. Their average wage is $5-6 per working day, a quarter of what permanent, unionised staff get. The minimum wage in Guangzhou, a Chinese industrial hub, is $10.5 per working day.

That might appear to be good news. If lots of factory workers can be hired at globally competitive rates, on flexible terms, manufacturing firms should pile into India. In practice the situation is unstable. As the Maruti riot showed, the two-tier workforce has caused anger—the five men in the lawyers’ room were permanent employees who say they were disgusted by the treatment of their contract colleagues. Maruti is abandoning the distinction. And from a financial perspective the contract system is not as good as it looks for employers. They must still hire unionised permanent staff, and though these may be in a minority they can account for the majority of a plant’s wage bill, lifting the average pay across all workers to Chinese levels.

The labour situation is a long way from the strikes and militancy of the 1970s, but it is unpredictable. That puts off potential manufacturers. And there are lots of other deterrents, too, from red tape to erratic electricity (see, for example, the monumental blackout across north and east India in 2012), a lack of land, bad roads and busy ports. One shipping boss thinks logistics add 20% to the cost of making something in India, compared with 6-8% in China. The Middle Kingdom hardly excelled on such metrics 20 years ago, but India does seem to be especially intimidating for industrial firms. Where non-labour problems have been tackled, notably in Gujarat, manufacturing does better. But Gujarat—population 60m—is not a big state by Indian standards.

Since 2000 India has tried carving out special economic zones (SEZs) to create islands with lower taxes and access to infrastructure, where manufacturers can feel at home. But these have been a limited success, with many dominated by IT firms. A new twist is a proposed industrial corridor between Delhi and Mumbai, inspired by the expressway between Seoul and Busan in South Korea. The project has Japanese support, but basic things such as access to land and water have yet to be settled.

In its frustration India is flirting with a more overt industrial policy. A new rule says that government offices must now buy computers with a chunk of components made locally. This is designed to improve the balance of payments and promote an indigenous industry. The government is also now offering subsidies that could be worth billions of dollars to attract a microchip foundry. There is a push to indigenise the defence industry.

The legislation on offer to try to change the situation more generally may not enthuse industry. There are noises about labour-law reform, but rather than liberalise the regime for permanent workers it may merely tighten the one for contract employees. A bill that is supposed to make it easier to buy land could make the process even more expensive and protracted, argue many businesspeople.

For robust jobs growth there must be a change of mindset among officials, judges and politicians. Although Mr Gandhi and others are talking about the challenge, not everyone is, partly due to the electoral system’s skew towards the countryside. Only 10% of legislators in the lower house have urban constituencies in which 75% or more of the population is urban, reckons the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies (CSDS), a think-tank. Jobs in factories in cities are not a priority for most politicians.


Failing gently

Could the voices of the young change this? There is a rising level of political involvement. A recent survey by CSDS and the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, a German think-tank, found that nearly twice as many of today’s 18- to 33-year-olds say they are interested in politics as did in 1996. Some 20% of young rural men say they participate in protests, as do 22% of college-educated young men. Those with exposure to the media, from talk shows to social media, are most politically active. One of India’s big mobile-messaging sites, Nimbuzz, with 25m mostly young users, says traffic doubled in the aftermath of the rape scandal in Delhi in December and during the Anna Hazare anti-graft protests. But the young have little independent political identity; their party allegiance is much like that of their parents. Nor do they have any obvious muscle.

The lack of political resolve and of a clear signal from voters mean India is unlikely to summon up the single-minded dedication with which South Korea, Taiwan and China created industrial jobs. Its demographic dividend will yield only a fraction of what it could, and the problem of low-quality employment will fester. That would be an immense waste. Most policymakers and well-off people would deny that it is a deep threat, though. The country’s religions, its distinctive mix of hierarchical culture and populist politics and its durable family structures will ensure social stability, they say.

They are probably right. They might want to pay their security guards a little more, though. Just in case.

From the print edition: Briefing
 
The rupee is where? Currency collapse confounds India Inc

The rupee is where? Currency collapse confounds India Inc

By Nandita Bose

MUMBAI | Wed Aug 28, 2013 8:37am IST

(Reuters) - Companies such as Whirlpool of India Ltd(WHIR.NS) say they can't plan more than a couple of months out as a fast-falling rupee currency drives up the cost of imports, forcing them to raise prices even as consumer spending crumbles.

The timing is particularly tough for consumer companies that were counting on India's September-to-December holiday season to spur sales. India's consumers, whose spending helped see the country through the global financial crisis in 2008, are closing their wallets, squeezing companies from carmakers to shampoo sellers.

Companies that import finished goods or raw materials are the worst hit as they scramble to hold onto margins while balancing the need to raise prices without deterring buyers.

"We are now planning for a month or three months at best unlike six months or a year earlier," said Shantanu Dasgupta, vice president for corporate affairs and strategy at Whirlpool of India, the local arm of Whirlpool Corp (WHR.N), the world's largest home appliance maker.

The rupee has tumbled 17 percent so far this year and hit an all-time low of 66.30 against the dollar on Tuesday, resisting a spate of interventions by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the government as investor fears about emerging markets deepened in anticipation of reduced U.S. monetary stimulus.

"A week back in our office we were working at (a rupee exchange rate of) 62 and now it's at 64 and looks like soon it will fall more and hit 67. How can a business operate when the currency is on a free-fall?" H.S. Bhatia, head of the enterprise business at television maker Videocon Industries (VEDI.NS), said in an August 21 interview.

The currency sell-off has since intensified, compounding difficulties for Videocon. The collapsing rupee pushes up prices of goods, adding to inflation on top of meagre urban salary hikes and an economy growing at its slowest in a decade.

Videocon imports raw materials and is planning to raise prices by about 4 percent to 5 percent in the coming days, its second hike in 2 months.

The currency blow is landing just as consumer companies look toward a boost from their strongest annual sales period, which starts in September with Ganesh Chaturthi, when the god of luck and prosperity is welcomed into Hindu homes, followed by the Diwali festival and then Christmas.

India's total consumption expenditure, which includes private and government spending, grew 3.3 percent in Jan-March 2013 from 9.3 percent in the same period a year earlier, according to government estimates. Total consumption expenditure as a share of the country's gross domestic product fell to 65.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2012/13 from 72.1 percent in the first quarter of the same fiscal year.

SLOW SLOW SLOW THE BOAT

Shoppers are not only cutting back on big-ticket purchases such as refrigerators, TVs or expensive branded apparel but even staples including soaps, ketchup and cosmetics.

A survey by the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry in June found monthly bills for the middle class jumped by 15 to 20 percent in a month across major cities as the falling rupee drove up prices of petroleum products and edible oil.

A paper in August by the same group found that even deep-pocketed consumers were cutting back, with five-star hotels and fine dining restaurants registering a decline of 20 percent in sales in the past three months after prices of imported food ingredients and spirits rose.

Makers of consumer goods like shampoos and soaps, popular defensive plays in weak economic times, are also feeling the pinch, with market leader Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HLL.NS) posting lower sales volumes for a fifth consecutive quarter in the June period.

"India is witnessing a slowdown and only recently in the past one quarter has it been so pronounced," said Manish Tiwary, executive director of sales and customer development at Hindustan Unilever.

Apparel retailer Provogue India Ltd (PROV.NS) has shut several stores in the past 12 months and is moving cautiously on expansion with a focus on franchisee-operated stores.

"It is a tough environment to operate in and Indian consumers are seeking even more value in the current market which impacts both sales density and margins," Provogue business head Timothy Eyon said.

The country's largest retail conglomerate, Future Group has an added problem as it tries to reduce the 40 billion rupees debt on its books.

Its plan to raise 6 billion to 8 billion rupees this fiscal year by offloading stakes in fashion brands to strategic and private equity players has been hit as the rupee volatility and weak capital market conditions have spooked investors, Group Chief Financial Officer C.P. Toshniwal said.

IMPACT WITH A LAG

While many consumer companies have resorted to price hikes to cope with the currency, long-term supplier contracts and hedging are helping some to bite the bullet for now.

Daimler AG's (DAIGn.DE) Mercedes-Benz has held off on a price hike even though it faces severe margin pressure from the sliding currency and rising fuel costs, but it may relent soon.

"We didn't get immediately affected by the weakening of rupee as we have a long-term hedging strategy. However the hedging period cannot be forever and we have to ensure that we run a sustainable business in the long term," Eberhard Kern, managing director at Mercedes-Benz India said.

Similarly, branded apparel maker Lacoste India is expecting a hit on its margins but will hold off on a price hike until the end of the year, Rajesh Jain, director and chief executive officer said. The company imports raw materials like yarn, but long-term supply contracts have so far insulated it from currency-related price increases of 15 percent.

However, that will be small comfort if demand stays weak.

"Growth has come to a grinding halt but that's not the only bad part," Whirlpool's Dassgupta said. "Demand is not likely to improve anytime soon and that's more worrying."

(Additional reporting by Aradhana Aravindan; Editing by Emily Kaiser)
 
That's kind of a bad news for us.....if Rupee keeps going down prices will go up in our neighboring region.....might increase smuggling!

BD does like $500 million trade with India. How is it going to hurt your $300 billion economy??

:woot: You will get more Indian good for same amount of money.
 
Is the rupee heading for 75/dollar? - NDTVProfit.com

Deutsche Bank had last week forecast that the rupee could crash to 70 against the U.S. dollar in a month. At that time the rupee was trading at 64 levels and the forecast was taken with a pinch of salt.

But after just one week since the report was put out, the 70 mark for the rupee looks ominously closer. The rupee hit a record low of 68.75 on Wednesday and more clouds gathering over the rupee.

Indian stock markets are continuing to slide as foreign investors are pulling out of India assets, oil prices are shooting up over the Syrian crisis and concerns are mounting over India's current account and fiscal deficit.

The Indian rupee and stock markets have been the worst performers among major Asian nations this year. Foreign institutional investors have pulled out close to $9 billion from the Indian debt markets and $3 billion from the equity markets since June.

Credit Agricole in a report said it does not see value in the rupee below 70 to a dollar unless foreign capital returns and that it would not recommend buying the currency for fundamental reasons below 75 to the dollar. "The only long-term solution - deep economic, political and social reforms - is unlikely ahead of the upcoming elections and possibly for years to come," Credit Agricole said in a note dated August 21.

Sajjid Chinoy, India Economist at JP Morgan, said rupee weakness is driving more rupee weakness and the government and the RBI should together try to stabilise the currency. "The self-fulfilling panic needs to broken by policy measures," he said. But neither the government nor the RBI has come out with big-bang policy measures to break the downward cycle in the rupee.

"There are lots of expectations on the fiscal side that something might happen and markets are waiting for some announcements. It's been pretty nice talk so far, but no implementation," said Jayesh Mehta of Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

Adding to the rupee's woes, global oil prices have already shot up to six-month-high levels as the momentum builds up for a Western military strike on Syria. A spike in oil prices would widen India's current account deficit, putting more pressure on the rupee.

Every dollar increase in crude oil prices adds about Rs. 4,000 crore to the loss for PSU oil companies that sell diesel, kerosene and LPG at a lower price than its actual cost. At a time when the Food Bill would put additional burden the government's finances, the government could ill afford to widen the oil subsidy substantially. Any slippage of the fiscal deficit front would not be viewed favourably by the ratings agencies. And a sovereign downgrade would be the last thing the government and the rupee needs.
 
rupee is back to 60

edit nvm ,wrong info.

it says SENSEX
18120.50124.35
NIFTY
5319.8534.85
USD/INR
60.64-0.32
Gold (MCX) (Rs/10g.)
33613.0-102.0

on one page and

SENSEX

18,147.57151.42

NIFTY

5,323.5038.50
Gold (MCX) (Rs/10g.)
33,613.0-102.0
USD / INR
67.6-1.2

economic times is loosing it.
 
rupee is back to 60

NO. Rupee is right now 67.20 because...

Rupee rallies on oil window, jumps to 67.20 per dollar - The Times of India

NEW DELHI: The rupee on Thursday regained the 66 level on RBI's move to provide dollars to oil companies.

The rupee opened 130 paise stronger at 67.20 per dollar and moved higher in early morning trade.

The Sensex and Nifty also opened in green in early morning trade on Thursday. The Sensex was trading at 18,152.23, up 156 points at 9.50am. The Nifty was also up by around 50 points at 9.50am.

The partially convertible rupee was trading at 66.90/91 per dollar at 9:10am (0340 GMT), 2.8 per cent 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 per cent.

Earlier on Wednesday, the rupee fell by a record 264 paise against the dollar to close at 68.83 on Wednesday as the likelihood of a US-led strike against Syria increased, sending crude prices soaring. The Reserve Bank of India responded to the fall by announcing a move to provide dollars from its reserves to meet import needs of oil companies which account for nearly 40% of demand for dollars in a normal month.

The free-fall of the rupee resulted in a surge in demand for gold, which saw its biggest-ever single day surge of Rs 2,500 to hit Rs 34,500 per 10 gram. The sensex, which at one point was down 533 points, recovered sharply to close 28 points higher at 17,996 after LIC stepped in to buy shares in a big way.

The RBI's move to sell dollars directly to public sector oil companies — IndianOil, HPCL and BPCL — has resulted in the rupee firming up in the offshore forward market. Dealers said that the RBI appears to have waited for the rupee to get into an oversold position before coming out with its measures.
 
Rupee has receded back to 66 mark on announcement of separate Oil window to Indian oil companies by RBI.
 
Rupee will pretty much hit all time lows in the coming weeks :pop:
RBI can't control it because the fundamentals are fooked up.The government spendings are are out of control.


SENSEX rose because all the Asian indices are up!
 
BD does like $500 million trade with India. How is it going to hurt your $300 billion economy??

:woot: You will get more Indian good for same amount of money.

No.....if inflation increases food prices in WB will go up.....but since we are not facing inflation our food price stay kinda stable.....And we have similar food habits as WB....so food from here will be smuggled to WB....specifically rice and 'dal'!
 
The good news for India, is that their massive government intervention is at least slowing down the fall of the Rupee, in time for the weekend. Though such interventions only provide temporary relief, compared to reforms which are needed to fix the base problems.

The bad news is that growth rates are falling like crazy, even without taking into account the effects of the collapsing Rupee.

India's growth slips to 4.4%, slowest in four years - Times of India
 
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