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India

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India s Emerging Multinationals: Trends, Patterns and Determinants of outward investments by Nagesh Kumar RIS www.ris.org.in Objectives Outward investment from ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: India


1
Indias Emerging Multinationals Trends,
Patterns and Determinants of outward investments
  • by
  • Nagesh Kumar
  • RIS
  • www.ris.org.in

2
Objectives
  • Outward investment from India becoming a
    significant trend since 1990s
  • Policy shifts
  • Emerging patterns, trends
  • Determinants does the theory help?
  • Policy implications

3
Policy Liberalization since 1991
  • Guidelines revised 1992, 1999, 2002, 2004
  • Investment upto 200 is permitted automatic
    approval for outward investment upto 100 of net
    worth
  • Financing of outward investment by Exim Bank
  • Seen as an instrument of global economic
    integration of Indian economy

4
Trends and Patterns
  • Sharp rise in numbers and magnitudes especially
    since 2000
  • Acquisition of Tetley by Tata Tea in 2000 was a
    turning point

5
Marked shift in Patterns after 1990
  • Geographical diversification
  • Before 1990 concentrated largely in Asian and
    African developing countries
  • After 1990 nearly 60 in developed countries
  • Sectoral distribution
  • Before 1990 65 in manufacturing, generally low
    tech. sectors
  • 1990- 60 in services high-tech manufacturing,
    natural resources, extraction etc.
  • Changing motivations
  • Before 1990 generally market seeking in low
    technology areas e.g. textiles leather goods,
    light engineering
  • 1990s trade supporting
  • 2000- seeking strategic assets, strategic access
    to markets, natural resources through acquistions
  • Evolution of global corporate strategy emergence
    of Indian MNEs

6
Evolution of Indian ODI
First wave pre-1990s Second wave 1990s Third Wave 2000-
Motivations Market-seeking Trade supporting Strategic assets and natural resources seeking
Sectors Low technology light engg., palm oil refining, rayon, paper IT services, pharma., etc. Metals, pharma, auto,
Magnitudes Small Moderate Large
Entry modes Greenfield Greenfield acquisitions
Destinations Asian and African low income countries Similar to exports Resource rich and strategic resource rich countries, e.g. UK, USA, Russia, S. Korea, Singapore
7
Asia as a destination for Indian Investments
  • Asia accounted for more than 55 of Indian ODI
    till 1995
  • Share came down to about 20 after 1996 because
    of bulky acquisitions in Europe and North America
  • Asian investments have become important segments
    of Indian companies global and regional
    strategies e.g.
  • Tata Steels acquisitions of NatSteel (Singapore)
    and Millenium Steel (Thailand) footprints in 12
    Asian countries
  • Tata Motors acquisitions of Daewoo Commercial
    Vehicles production restructuring to exploit
    synergies
  • Bharat Forge, TCS, Infosys, Ranbaxy in China
  • Underestimation due to indirect investments
    through acquired companies
  • E.g. Thomsons plants in China controlled by
    Videocon
  • India has emerged as the 4th largest source of
    FDI in Sri Lanka
  • Singapore is emerging a regional hub for Indian
    IT companies operations in Asia

8
Determinants of Outward Investment by a Company
hypotheses
  • Sources of Ownership Advantages of Indian
    Enterprises
  • Accumulated learning (LEARNING) proxied by age
    of firms
  • Technological Effort (TECHEFFORT) proxied by RD
    intensity
  • Product Differentiation (BRANDS) proxied by
    advertisement intensity
  • Cost Effectiveness (COSTEFFECT) proxied by price
    cost margins
  • Firm Size (SIZE and SIZE2) proxied by sales
  • Foreign exposure measured through
    export-orientation (EXPORT) export to sales
    ratio
  • Technological dependence (TECHIM, MACHIM)
    inverse intensity of royalty payments and
    machinery imports
  • Foreign ownership (FOREIGN)- inverse
  • Policy change (LIBERAL)
  • Industry effects

9
Data set and estimation methodology
  • Sample 4271 quoted companies from Prowess
  • Outward investment variable added on the basis of
    information gathered from government sources
  • Panel data for period 1988/89 to 2000/01
  • Logit model ML estimation with robust standard
    errors

10
Findings
  • LEARNING, TECHEFFORT, BRANDS strong positive
    effect
  • SIZE inverted u-shaped effect
  • EXPORT strong positive effect
  • MACHIM ive effect
  • FOREIGN- negative effect
  • LIBERAL-positive effect
  • Some variation in effectiveness of variables
    across technology classes
  • ownership advantages effective in low and medium
    tech industries
  • Cost effectiveness effective in low technology
    industries

11
Concluding remarks
  • Indian enterprises draw their ownership
    advantages from their accumulated production
    experience, technological effort for process
    adaptations and innovations, and ability to
    differentiate their product.
  • Encourage learning/ innovative activity/ branding
  • Effect of firm size
  • Some consolidation of fragmented capacities might
    be useful
  • Liberalization
  • Enabling policy environment helps

12
Thank you
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