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Pak Media:India can be another China!

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India escapes the worst of emerging markets misery

955932-india-1442122268-946-640x480.png

Mark Williams, chief Asia economist at Capital Economics in London, says India is looking like an oasis of stability at the moment PHOTO: AFP

NEW DELHI: Three years ago India was the weakling of the emerging markets clan, politically stagnant and struggling to grow — but as gloom engulfs other developing economies, the subcontinent is enjoying a moment in the sun.

Brazil and Russia lie deep in recession and South Africa is teetering on the brink after demand for raw materials collapsed, while alarm bells have sounded over fears the China juggernaut may be faltering.

Enter India, once dubbed the Broken BRIC, as the core group is known, now poised to become the fastest-growing G20 economy, expanding at a respectable seven percent, with its finances nourished by cheap oil.

“If you look at the growth numbers, India is definitely doing better than these other economies,” Kunal Kundu, an economist at Societe Generale in Bangalore, told AFP.

Read: India’s economy grows by 7% in first quarter

“China is in slowdown mode and Brazil and Russia are in trouble because they are commodities-dependent. We are seeing India as the standout.”

It is not all rosy — while low-cost oil and a new way of calculating growth have added shine to India’s GDP figures, its exports remain poor and shares on the Bombay Stock Exchange languish five percent below a year ago.

Economists say underlying growth remains fragile, and question whether the re-calculated figures that show India’s growth rate has caught up with China’s can be trusted.

But as turmoil convulsed global markets this summer, wiping trillions of dollars off world exchanges and leading investors to flee emerging economies, India has escaped comparatively unscathed.

“India is looking like an oasis of stability at the moment,” said Mark Williams, chief Asia economist at Capital Economics in London.

“It is a very different picture from a couple of years ago when India was at the forefront of concerns.”

As long as China steamrolled along at double-digit pace, covering its landscape with highways and skyscrapers, train tracks and malls, it sucked in vast amounts of raw materials such as oil, coal, iron ore for steelmaking, and cement.

Now the magic growth engine is sputtering out its worst GDP figures since 1990, Beijing says; analysts say the truth could be even uglier.

When the Middle Kingdom’s appetite waned it cast a chill over Brazil, whose economy depends on selling commodities to China and a handful of other big customers.

Prices have drooped, with the Bloomberg Commodity Index that tracks 22 raw materials falling to its lowest in 16 years in August, and not only are prices low, no one is buying like before.

“Brazil is very affected, more than other emerging countries, especially after what happened yesterday,” said Alex Agostini, chief economist at Austin Rating in Sao Paulo, referring to Standard & Poor’s decision to cut Brazil’s sovereign rating to junk.

At the peak of the boom in 2010 the one-time South American superstar grew 7.5 per cent; economists now expect it to remain in recession in 2016, as political paralysis compounds its woes.

Fellow junk-rated Russia, an oil exporter which lost big when prices halved, faces biting sanctions over the Ukraine crisis, while the number of Russians living in poverty has soared to 21.7 million, or roughly 15 percent of its total population, statistics agency Rosstat said.

“The main impact now comes through China influencing the global economy, commodities and financial markets,” Oleg Kouzmin at Renaissance Capital in Moscow said. He expects Russia’s economy to shrink by four per cent this year.

In South Africa, one of China’s biggest suppliers of minerals, one in four people is unemployed and GDP unexpectedly shrank 1.3 percent in the second quarter. Sales of iron ore have tanked, leading mining companies to announce huge layoffs.

Adding to the pain is a looming Federal Reserve interest rate rise, which will make riskier emerging markets less attractive compared with the dollar.

Next to its fractious emerging market cousins, politically stable India looks positively glowing, named by the IMF as one of the few “bright spots” in the world economy.

Low commodity prices are a gift: while cheap crude has pummelled exporters, India, which imports 80 percent of its oil needs, won the lottery.

The ensuing cash windfall has helped the government balance its books and made it less reliant on foreign loans.

“India is in a much better position, we don’t have some of the problems the other economies have,” said Arya Sen at Jefferies investment bank in Mumbai.

“Not only that, we are probably going to see an acceleration in growth which is very rare at the moment.”

Yet old problems persist — Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s promised reforms have stalled, with a land acquisition bill abandoned and a key sales tax delayed indefinitely.

Read: India’s economic reform agenda hits roadblocks

India escaped much of the recent global turmoil because it exports relatively little — meaning it does not make enough goods people want to buy, isolating it from the wider economy.

Labour and investment laws remain agonisingly complex, hindering growth, while outdated infrastructure is badly in need of funds.

And while in New Delhi politicians trumpet a growth rate that now rivals China’s, economists warn India is still a chronic underperformer.

Its $2 trillion economy is five times smaller than that of China, which although not bounding like before still contributes more than a third of global growth.

“India should not be complacent, politicians should not be celebrating,” Williams at Capital Economics said.

“It should be growing much faster. It could have had growth of nine or 10 percent, it could have been another China.”

India escapes the worst of emerging markets misery - The Express Tribune

@Horus @Windjammer @HariPrasad
 
Cheap oil is going to kick start several economies including China and India..so the effect multiplier is for everyone..these arm chair analysit assume everyone to be stand still, pick up an indicator , apply it on a country and viola..their gloom theory is ready...
 
India's economy is growing and becoming strong and there is no comparison with China.
Here China means that China which has grown with double digit growth rate for 3 decades. Not Current slowing China.

Cheap oil is going to kick start several economies including China and India..so the effect multiplier is for everyone..these arm chair analysit assume everyone to be stand still, pick up an indicator , apply it on a country and viola..their gloom theory is ready...

Slowing of China is one of reason for cheap oil.

India is going to cash that cheap oil.
 
No comparison,India too hot we already give up.
 
Let me spare you some more effort here:

The foreign NGO funded media like DAWN, Express Tribune and Geo will write and do anything to undermine Pakistan and propogate Indian POV.

It is better to read Times of India than reading these. At least TOI does not disguise itself as "Pakistani media".

So a random positive article or news item every few months aside, these media outlets will tell you everything which you could otherwise read in NDTV, Zee, The Hindu, Indian Express or Times of India.

Now it is your choice, whether you like these or the above mentioned, :cheers:
 
India cant adopt Chinese growth model.

India needs its own model for Economic Development and once adopted, it needs to be followed constantly, carefully.

We also need to give attention to manufacturing sector.

New ideas are needed.

But most importantly Projects like Golden Quadrlateral, Freight Corridor and Other Highway Projects are nedeed.

We must have massive, carefully planned Infra Projcets as only with World Class Infra we can be come a Manufacturing Hub.

India escapes the worst of emerging markets misery

955932-india-1442122268-946-640x480.png

Mark Williams, chief Asia economist at Capital Economics in London, says India is looking like an oasis of stability at the moment PHOTO: AFP

NEW DELHI: Three years ago India was the weakling of the emerging markets clan, politically stagnant and struggling to grow — but as gloom engulfs other developing economies, the subcontinent is enjoying a moment in the sun.

Brazil and Russia lie deep in recession and South Africa is teetering on the brink after demand for raw materials collapsed, while alarm bells have sounded over fears the China juggernaut may be faltering.

Enter India, once dubbed the Broken BRIC, as the core group is known, now poised to become the fastest-growing G20 economy, expanding at a respectable seven percent, with its finances nourished by cheap oil.

“If you look at the growth numbers, India is definitely doing better than these other economies,” Kunal Kundu, an economist at Societe Generale in Bangalore, told AFP.

Read: India’s economy grows by 7% in first quarter

“China is in slowdown mode and Brazil and Russia are in trouble because they are commodities-dependent. We are seeing India as the standout.”

It is not all rosy — while low-cost oil and a new way of calculating growth have added shine to India’s GDP figures, its exports remain poor and shares on the Bombay Stock Exchange languish five percent below a year ago.

Economists say underlying growth remains fragile, and question whether the re-calculated figures that show India’s growth rate has caught up with China’s can be trusted.

But as turmoil convulsed global markets this summer, wiping trillions of dollars off world exchanges and leading investors to flee emerging economies, India has escaped comparatively unscathed.

“India is looking like an oasis of stability at the moment,” said Mark Williams, chief Asia economist at Capital Economics in London.

“It is a very different picture from a couple of years ago when India was at the forefront of concerns.”

As long as China steamrolled along at double-digit pace, covering its landscape with highways and skyscrapers, train tracks and malls, it sucked in vast amounts of raw materials such as oil, coal, iron ore for steelmaking, and cement.

Now the magic growth engine is sputtering out its worst GDP figures since 1990, Beijing says; analysts say the truth could be even uglier.

When the Middle Kingdom’s appetite waned it cast a chill over Brazil, whose economy depends on selling commodities to China and a handful of other big customers.

Prices have drooped, with the Bloomberg Commodity Index that tracks 22 raw materials falling to its lowest in 16 years in August, and not only are prices low, no one is buying like before.

Brazil is very affected, more than other emerging countries, especially after what happened yesterday,” said Alex Agostini, chief economist at Austin Rating in Sao Paulo, referring to Standard & Poor’s decision to cut Brazil’s sovereign rating to junk.

At the peak of the boom in 2010 the one-time South American superstar grew 7.5 per cent; economists now expect it to remain in recession in 2016, as political paralysis compounds its woes.

Fellow junk-rated Russia, an oil exporter which lost big when prices halved, faces biting sanctions over the Ukraine crisis, while the number of Russians living in poverty has soared to 21.7 million, or roughly 15 percent of its total population, statistics agency Rosstat said.

“The main impact now comes through China influencing the global economy, commodities and financial markets,” Oleg Kouzmin at Renaissance Capital in Moscow said. He expects Russia’s economy to shrink by four per cent this year.

In South Africa, one of China’s biggest suppliers of minerals, one in four people is unemployed and GDP unexpectedly shrank 1.3 percent in the second quarter. Sales of iron ore have tanked, leading mining companies to announce huge layoffs.

Adding to the pain is a looming Federal Reserve interest rate rise, which will make riskier emerging markets less attractive compared with the dollar.

Next to its fractious emerging market cousins, politically stable India looks positively glowing, named by the IMF as one of the few “bright spots” in the world economy.

Low commodity prices are a gift: while cheap crude has pummelled exporters, India, which imports 80 percent of its oil needs, won the lottery.

The ensuing cash windfall has helped the government balance its books and made it less reliant on foreign loans.


“India is in a much better position, we don’t have some of the problems the other economies have,” said Arya Sen at Jefferies investment bank in Mumbai.

Not only that, we are probably going to see an acceleration in growth which is very rare at the moment.”

Yet old problems persist — Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s promised reforms have stalled, with a land acquisition bill abandoned and a key sales tax delayed indefinitely.

Read: India’s economic reform agenda hits roadblocks

India escaped much of the recent global turmoil because it exports relatively little — meaning it does not make enough goods people want to buy, isolating it from the wider economy.

Labour and investment laws remain agonisingly complex, hindering growth, while outdated infrastructure is badly in need of funds.

And while in New Delhi politicians trumpet a growth rate that now rivals China’s, economists warn India is still a chronic underperformer.

Its $2 trillion economy is five times smaller than that of China, which although not bounding like before still contributes more than a third of global growth.

“India should not be complacent, politicians should not be celebrating,” Williams at Capital Economics said.

“It should be growing much faster. It could have had growth of nine or 10 percent, it could have been another China.”

India escapes the worst of emerging markets misery - The Express Tribune
 
Let me spare you some more effort here:

The foreign NGO funded media like DAWN, Express Tribune and Geo will write and do anything to undermine Pakistan and propogate Indian POV.

It is better to read Times of India than reading these. At least TOI does not disguise itself as "Pakistani media".

So a random positive article or news item every few months aside, these media outlets will tell you everything which you could otherwise read in NDTV, Zee, The Hindu, Indian Express or Times of India.

Now it is your choice, whether you like these or the above mentioned, :cheers:

Hang on a minute! You think it is NOT in Pakistan's interest for a Pakistani media outlet to report anything positive about India even if the news is true?

Should they continue to report on only the problems of India in order to be considered patriotic?
 
India and it's industry should take full advantage of oppertunity provided...
...or else go down the history like MMS lost decade....
..wish Vajpayee had won 2004..
 
And now the Oil prices are expected to fall 20$ a barrel... more good news.. Indian Economy is going to expand

And now the Oil prices are expected to fall 20$ a barrel... more good news.. Indian Economy is going to expand
 
just wondering once we become another china will we have the same sweeter than honey friendship with Pakistan? Or do we need to build a JF18 for that?:ashamed:
 
Hang on a minute! You think it is NOT in Pakistan's interest for a Pakistani media outlet to report anything positive about India even if the news is true?

Should they continue to report on only the problems of India in order to be considered patriotic?
Of cos, they need to do that to show patriotism. :D
 
just wondering once we become another china will we have the same sweeter than honey friendship with Pakistan? Or do we need to build a JF18 for that?:ashamed:
Nope you forgot they will become economic powerhouse well before India because they have-


CPEC- Naali se dollar bahenge.:D
 

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