Is India collapsing?

Indian Rupee is now 42 for one dollar, inflation is 11.9%. Economists have predicted that India will not maintain the growth.

Situation in India is getting worse with rising food prices. With No rain there is drought like situation. Stocks are diving low. Gone are the dreams of “India Shining”.

All the dream merchants, who until recently were gloating over the country’s booming economy at swish dinner parties are washing their hands off its fanciful growth prospects. Industrial growth is six year low.

High cost of living hurts; incomes are down and borrowings are costlier. Everything that you need to live is 200 times costlier. And population of India is increasing outstripping China.

Water, housing, power or transport is scarce. Cities like Mumbai and Bangalore are one of the most expensive cities in world.

In city after city, the story is the same. Filth on the roadsides, garbage everywhere, and worse still is the discharge of hospital waste and hazardous material into open landfill sites which threaten to damage our groundwater resources. The municipal agencies’ inability to tackle the problem is only adding to the intensity of the time bomb that is waiting to explode.

Web Exclusive | India?s crisis is faecal not fiscal - Economy and Politics - livemint.com

Well out of every 5 people in the world, 1 is Indian. Isn't it a dilemma or what.

Re: Is India collapsing?

There would be people on streets if people dont get electricity, food, water etc.

:)......Look at the bright side............atleast they still got Nukes........:)

India’s Economy Hits the Wall

Growth is slipping, stocks are down 40%, and foreign stock market investors are fleeing. Business blames the ruling coalition for failing to make reforms
by Manjeet Kripalani

Just six months ago, India was looking good. Annual growth was 9%, corporate profits were surging 20%, the stock market had risen 50% in 2007, consumer demand was huge, local companies were making ambitious international acquisitions, and foreign investment was growing. Nothing, it seemed, could stop the forward march of this Asian nation.

But stop it has. In the past month, India has joined the list of the wounded. The country is reeling from 11.4% inflation, large government deficits, and rising interest rates. Foreign investment in India’s stock market is fleeing, the rupee is falling, and the stock market is down over 40% from the year’s highs. Most economic forecasts expect growth to slow to 7%—a big drop for a country that needs to accelerate growth, not reduce it. “India has gone from hero to zero in six months,” says Andrew Holland, head of proprietary trading at Merrill Lynch India (MER) in Mumbai. Many in India worry that the country’s hard-earned investment-grade rating will soon be lost and that the gilded growth story has come to an end.

Global circumstances—soaring oil prices and the subprime crisis that dried up the flow of foreign funds—are certainly to blame. But so is New Delhi. Much of the crisis India faces today could have been avoided by skillful planning. India imports 75% of its oil to meet demand, which have grown exponentially as its economy expands. The government also subsidizes 60% of the price of such fuels as diesel. In 2007, when inflation was a low 3%, economists such as Standard & Poor’s Subir Gokarn urged New Delhi to start cutting subsidies. Instead, the populist ruling Congress government spent $25 billion on waiving loans made to farmers and hiking bureaucrats’ salaries.

Botched Opportunities
Now those expenditures, plus an additional $25 billion on upcoming fertilizer subsidies, is adding $100 billion a year—or 10% of India’s gross domestic product, or equivalent to the country’s entire collection of income taxes—to the national bill. This at a time when India needs urgently to spend $500 billion on new infrastructure and more on upgrading education and health-care facilities. The government’s official debt, which dropped below 6% of gross domestic product last year, will now be closer to 10% this year. “Starting last year, the government missed key opportunities” to fix the economy, says Gokarn. In fact, he adds, “there has been no significant reform done at all in the past four years”—the time the Congress coalition has been in power.

Even the most bullish on India are hard-pressed to recall any significant economic reforms made in the recent past. A plan to build 30 Special Economic Zones is virtually suspended because New Delhi has not sorted out how to acquire the necessary land, a major issue in both urban and rural India, without a major social and political upheaval. Agriculture, distorted by fertilizer subsidies and technologically laggard, is woefully unproductive. Simple and nonpolitical reforms, like strengthening the legal system and adding more judges to the courtrooms, have been ignored.

A June 16 report by Goldman Sachs’ (GS) Jim O’Neill and Tushar Poddar, Ten Things for India to Achieve Its 2050 Potential, is a grim reminder that India has fallen to the bottom of the four BRIC nations (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) in its growth scores, due largely to government inertia. The report states that India’s rice yields are a third those of China and half of Vietnam’s. While 60% of the country’s labor force is employed in agriculture, farming contributes less than 1% to overall growth. The report urges India to improve governance, raise educational achievement, and control inflation. It also advises reining in profligate expenditures, liberalizing its financial markets, increasing agricultural productivity, and improving infrastructure, the environment, and energy use.

“The will to implement all these needs leadership,” points out Poddar. “We have a government in New Delhi with the best brains, the dream team,” he says, referring to Oxford-educated Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Harvard-educated Finance Minister P. Chidambaram. “If they don’t deliver, then what?”

Disillusioned Business
More worried than most are India’s businessmen, who have turned in stellar performances with their investment and entrepreneurial drive and begun to look like multinational players. For them, there’s plenty at stake. But lack of infrastructure, from new ports to roads, along with an undeveloped corporate bond market and high prices for real estate, commodities, and talent, are causing them to hit “choke points and structural impediments all over. We will lose years,” says Bombay investor Chetan Parikh of of Jeetay Investments.

Sanjay Kirloskar, chief executive of Kirloskar Brothers (KRBR.BO), a premier $470 million maker of water pumps, already has $100 million in overseas contracts. Yet few infrastructure contracts have come from New Delhi. Kirloskar had hoped to be part of a grand project linking India’s rivers, but those plans have been on hold for four years. “The infrastructure growth we had hoped for has not come about,” he says. “Instead, we will now expand overseas more than in India.”

Such constraints on growth at home will have an impact. Corporate earnings growth is likely to dip, says Merrill Lynch’s Holland, who now predicts just 10% growth, instead of the previous year’s 20%. That slowdown makes it less attractive for foreigners to invest in India’s stock market. Already this year, foreigners have taken $5.5 billion out of the market, compared with the $19 billion they invested last year. Gagan Banga, chief executive of India Bulls Financial Services, an emerging finance and real estate giant, points admiringly to China’s ability to maintain its growth momentum for a decade, while India’s has not been able to hold up for even three years. “Serious companies are going to grow at a much slower pace, and some may even de-grow this year,” he says. Unless major policy decisions are made by New Delhi immediately to keep the economy on the growth path, he says, “India will slow down even further.”

New Delhi defends its four year reign in India. “We’ve had 9% growth for four years in a row,” says Sanjaya Baru, media adviser to Prime Minister Singh. “That is unprecedented.” He attributes it to the increasing rate of investment, up from 28% of GDP to 35% currently, “close to most ASEAN economies,” though he admits that a large part is from the private sector. “Yes, there is a fiscal problem, but there’s a price to be paid for coalition politics,” adds Baru. So having growth drop “from 9% to 7% is not grim.”

Social Backlash?
Chetan Modi, head of Moody’s India, says the increasingly high cost of doing business in India may force global investors who had set up base in India—especially financial-services players—to move to more affordable and efficient hubs, such as Singapore and Hong Kong. If the economy slows and inflation continues to accelerate, says Sherman Chan, economist at Moody’s Economy.com, “social unrest is possible.”

In fact, India is becoming a dangerous social cauldron. The wealth harvested by the reforms of previous governments has made itself evident in the luxury cars and apartments in India’s big cities, leaving much of India full of aspirations but few means to achieve them. There is a severe shortage of colleges, yet a plan to build 1,500 universities gathers dust. The Communists in the ruling coalition are against both globalization and industrialization, so without new factories being built, employment growth has been almost stagnant, rising to just 2%—a disappointing rate in a country where an estimated 14 million youths enter the workforce every year, but just 1 million get jobs in the regulated, above-ground economy.

Meanwhile, few expect any bold moves New Delhi, especially with national elections due in 2009 and five important state elections scheduled before the end of this year. Thus far, the ruling Congress party’s record has been poor; it has lost almost every state election this year and is likely to lose all five of the upcoming ones.

The big hope for a return to the course of reform in India, businessmen hope, will be a new government in New Delhi next year. The gravest danger is that India’s messy coalition politics will bring into power another indecisive alliance that will keep the country in policy limbo for another five years. If so, says S&P’s Gokarn, it’s a meltdown scenario: growth slipping below 6.5%, accelerating the chances of India reverting to its 1991 status when it was plunged into a balance-of-payments crisis.

Editor’s note: The original version of this story should have made clear that the “foreign investment” fleeing India referred to investments in India’s stock market.

Kripalani is BusinessWeek’s India bureau chief.

India’s Economy Hits the Wall

Re: Is India collapsing?

I don't think India is collapsing in any way. There are fluctuations that occur from time to time. But, i'm sure India will survive. It's just a bumpy ride, i think.

Re: Is India collapsing?

India is doing better than Pakistan. So shut it. Concentrate on our own home instead of celebrating the downfall of others.

Do you realise how lasting an affect this will have on poor families and those who will be laid off due to this global down turn?

****ing idiots on GS.

There you go again crap against India. You should have posted this article in right context, the actual context was in regards to —> “Indian cities generate nearly 120,000 tonnes of waste everyday; while the fiscal crisis would impoverish us, the faecal one will choke us”…

Slowing down of Indian economy is mainly because of three causes 1) US election year 2) Indian election year 3) Hike in prices of Oil.

And whenever Indian Rupee goes down, Indian exporter enjoys specially the IT sector (Where foreign remittance comes in Dollar) which has significant number of employees.

Re: Is India collapsing?

India and China in particular and the rest of the Asian tigers in general are mainly dependent on exports of services and goods to the USA.

As the USA is down, these tigers are suffering too.

Welcome to the realities of global trade.

And no, with Indian nationalism at the core of Hindu-India, this country ain't collapsing any time soon.

If 6000 children a day die of starvation then there isn’t much left to collapse..

Re: Is India collapsing?

^ Did you notice most families and children shown in this video were Muslim. In India there is a widespread concept that Muslim families should be kept impoverished, so that some of them die with malnutrition, if not by genoicide or in Hindu riots.

Re: Is India collapsing?

what do you mean collapsing?? you mean it will become third world like african countries, or become dysfunctional and war ravaged as pakistan or economic recession like US.

India is the most stable country in the region and there aint no chance of any collapse. People here jumping up and down need to look at their home first and then give their hypocritical judgment which is out of jealousy anyways..

its of their own making...fertility rates among the highest and illiteracy rampant..

if u breed more u should be aware of the consequences...when asked u get a standard reply ALLA KA DIYA HUA....

dude i have no doubt that you are the most venomus guy on GS.

Agreed!

bari jaldi divine-light ko bhool gaye :hehe:

And i have no doubt, you are the dumbest Indian i have ever come across. Other then passing some personal remarks, i have never ever seen you commenting on the faults of your beloved India. But why would you, to you every wrong that belongs to India is right.

Re: Is India collapsing?

Chintu has raised a valid point in the sense that the growth of muslim population in India is unimaginable. I have a neighbour who has around 14 children. He is a college lecturer and cant afford to send them to good schools. These children roam around the area the whole day and is a major menace. When my dad suggested Family Planning to this guy, he was adamant to have more children. Unless and until Muslim families realise the importance of Family planning and take ownership of their own children, they would continue to reamin at teh bottom of the economic stream...

Agreed,

what you want me to talk about. How 80 crore hindus made a plan alltogether to eliminate muslims by making them poor? They insisted muslims to have as many kids as possible so they wont be able to pass good education to any of them and they also stopped selling condoms to them so they cannot plan to do family planning.
Also hindus bribed mullahs to open madardsaa everywhere and does not include any subject or skill which will make them earn their livelihood.

i lived in old bhopal for 10 years which is 80% muslim population area. My muslim friends who completed their their educatin with me are all working in good companies and the ones who stopped after high school are working as mechanics or opened a pan shop.

It does need a brain why a particular community is not fully progressing but I cant expect you to use yours as u have none.