Title: India Globalization
1India Globalization Convergence
2What benefits does India have?
- One of the largest economies in the world.
- Strategic location - access to the vast domestic
and South Asian market. - A large and rapidly growing consumer market up to
300 million people, estimated to be growing at 8
per annum. - Demand for several consumer products is growing
at over 12 per annum. - Foreign investment is welcome, approval is
required but is automatic in sixty categories of
Industries. - Skilled man-power and professional managers are
available at competitive cost. - One of the largest manufacturing sectors in the
world, spanning almost all areas of manufacturing
activities. - One of the largest pools of scientists,
engineers, technicians and managers in the world.
3What benefits does India have?
- Rich base of mineral and agricultural resources.
- Long history of market economy infrastructure
- Sophisticated financial sector.
- Vibrant capital market
- Well developed RD infrastructure and technical
and marketing services. - Complete exemption from Customs Duty on
industrial inputs and Corporate Tax Holiday for
five years for 100 per cent Export Oriented units
and units in Export Processing Zones. - A long history of stable parliamentary democracy.
4Capital Markets
- 23 stock exchanges across the country
- Major Exchanges
- The Stock Exchange, Mumbai (BSE)
- The National Stock Exchange (NSE)
- Exchange regulation via Securities and Exchange
Board of India - Both BSE and NSE provide fully automated, screen
based trading systems - There are approximately 7,300 companies listed on
the BSE and 800 on the NSE
5Comparison with China
- Socialist China
- Independent India
- Massive Economies
- China 21 world population
- India 16.5 world population
- Why is India not challenging China?
6Why the lack of development?
- Slow development of economy
- Lack of privatisation
- Protectionism
- Restrictive Labour Laws
- Over subsidisation of State-owned enterprises
7Privatisation
- Why has privatisation been so slow?
- Historic precedents post-independence
- Under 5 year plans Indian government took
responsibility for investment and direction of
private sector - Should market forces dictate resource allocation?
- Indian economy has such extreme disparities in
incomes that the free market as allocator of
resources carries too much risk
8Privatisation
- Private sector did not have sufficient resources
nor - Could it be expected to bear long-term small
returns on projects - SOEs as social safety net
- The overriding problem of poverty
9How to solve poverty
- Nehru, Premier from 1947 to 1964, saw
industrialisation as the key to alleviating
poverty - Believed a powerful state with a centralised
planned economy to be essential if the country
was to industrialise rapidly - Poverty reduction through industrialisation
guides economic policy - Has become ingrained belief
- If policies which support industrialisation are
altered then poverty will increase
10Poverty Levels
Year All India Rural Urban
1973 54.9 56.4 49.0
1978 51.3 53.1 45.2
1983 44.5 45.7 40.8
1988 38.9 39.1 38.2
1994 36.0 37.3 32.4
1999 26.1 27.1 23.6
11Protectionism
- Isolating Indias economy from rest of world
reduces effects of external shocks - Method
- High tariffs to prevent imports
- Effect of 1991 financial crisis
- dismantled investment and import licensing
- removed dysfunctional controls on capital issues
and foreign investment. - Tariffs were reduced from an average of 87 to
25.
12Protectionism
- Positive effects
- Avoided effects of Asian crisis 1997
- Less impact of world economic slowdown
- Negative effects
- Historic capital controls
- Low levels of FDI
13FDI
- India is not a favourite destination of foreign
investors - Total inflows of foreign direct investment was
around 2.2 billion in 1999 - Compared to Thailands 6 billion and Chinas 40
billion - Or
- 2001 FDI in India ½ of GDP
- 2001 FDI in China 5 GDP
14FDI (or lack of it)
- Lack of FDI led to self-funding of
industrialisation via government credits - One of the contributory causes of the
macro-economic crisis of 1991 was the combined
fiscal deficit of central and state governments - Ran at unsustainable 10 of GDP
15Bringing in FDI
- Structural and regulatory changes are required to
boost FDI - Which will increase growth in economy
- And provide spillover effects
- Barriers to FDI
- cumbersome approvals process
- questions regarding the legal system
- regulatory impediments to doing business
- poor infrastructure
- perceived slowdown in the pace of economic reform
16Reform Programme
- Programme of reform instituted since 1991
- But still retain problems with
- Lack of commitment to full privatisation of
SOEs - Since 1991 minority equity sales have occurred in
only 40 of the 240 central public enterprises - Failure to implement strong bankruptcy laws
- Failure to reform labour laws
17The grip of organised labour
- Rigid labour laws have long been identified as
obstacles to growth and equity - Probably the most highly protective of labour
interests in the world. - There is practically no link between output and
remuneration - hiring and firing are highly
restricted. - It is extremely difficult to maintain an economic
level of productivity or improve productivity. - The present form of protection of organized
labour constitutes about 5-6 of the whole
population
18The grip of organised labour
- This tiny labour aristocracy is employed in the
public and organized private sectors. - They do not represent the interests of the
overwhelming majority of Indias workers, who are
either self-employed or work as casual labour - They do not enjoy job protection or any other
benefits conferred on the aristocracy by the
labour laws. - The aristocracy also consists of members of one
or the other of the labour unions affiliated with
ruling and opposition political parties. - Labour unions has been particularly effective in
preventing privatization of public sector
enterprises - Some privatised companies have no social utility
value (eg hotels, airlines)
19Indias problem is bureaucracy, not democracy
- The combination of
- Vested interests
- Continued reliance on belief in industrialisation
as key to poverty and - The need to retain protectionist measures to
sustain industrialisation - Leads to slowdown in growth and development
20Evidence against
- Improvement in poverty since 1991 start of reform
- No matter what the data source, survey or
national accounts, growth is shown to lead to
poverty decline, almost one for one - No growth, no poverty reduction is the only
conclusion
21WTO and the end of protectionism?
- As signatory to Uruguay Round agreement 1994
- India has removed quantitative restrictions on
imports of agricultural commodities and consumer
goods - But replaced with high tariffs
- Has stated will use all steps available under WTO
rules to protect economy from imports - Is 4th largest user of antidumping regulations
- Is most protected economy in Asia
22Economic Conclusion
- Despite a range of impediments
- There is slow reform
- Reform positively assists poverty reduction
through growth - To sustain growth further liberalisation of all
economic aspects must continue - Merrill Lynch believes that GDP will grow by an
average of 8.5 a year in 2005, 2006 and 2007,
buoyed by rises in foreign investment
23Entrepreneur effects
- Need to stimulate small business
- More acute access to funds
- Higher investment in education at low end
- Development of labour intensive export potential
- Skewed to hi-tech without much positive export
success - Foreign business opportunities in privatisation
of infrastructures
24Prahalads imperatives for management
- India has hardly felt the impact of SE Asian
crisis. - While many think it is good news, actually it is
not. - It means that after five years of active
liberalization, India is still not part of the
global economy. - It is at best a marginal, global player.
25Prahalads imperatives for management The New
Economy
- Deregulation Privatisation
- Globalisation
- Open Standards
- Digitalisation
- Volatility
- Focused Competitors
- Eco sensitivity
- Transparency Accountability
- Indian managers must come to terms with the fact
that they represent about 20 of humanity and
that they should have a say in how the global
economy evolves
26Practical level pragmatism - management practice
- Gopalan Stahl (2001)
- Argue for cross-vergence hybrid combination of
domestic imported concepts - Widespread usage of English
- Familiarity with western education
- Urban access to internet
- Lead Indian management thinking to a point where
- Some ideologies equate to western practice (ie
reject Indian national cultural values) - Others reflect national cultural values
- combination of indigenous imported approaches
to managing people at work - suggest eg Loyalty will be strong
- preferential hiring of family members will be weak
27Business performance
- Rajpal Sagar (2003) identify that performance
of Indian business is good at MNC level but
problems emerge lower down - They suggest local businesses are in need of
radical improvement if they are to meet global
challenges (Chinese) - Need to develop key traits
- Having key customer insights
- Focusing business strategies on customer value
- Quality commitment
- Upgrading knowledge processes
- Management by facts feedback
28The key of privatisation
- Gupta (2005)
- Most privatization programs begin with a period
of partial privatization in which - only non-controlling shares of firms are sold on
the stock market. - Since management control is not transferred to
private owners it is widely contended that
partial privatization has little impact. - This perspective ignores the role that the stock
market can play in monitoring and rewarding
managerial performance even when the government
remains the controlling owner. - Using data on Indian state-owned enterprises we
find that partial privatization has a positive
impact on profitability, productivity, and
investment.