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CHINESE SLOWDOWN: INDIAS BIG BREAK

India has a happy story to tell believes Paul Krugman. The Year of the Monkey, regarded to
be the unluckiest in Chinese astrology is unlikely to affect India as the country is currently in a
different league in terms of macroeconomic stability. People are optimistic as the global finance
guru Mohd El Erian reckons that the 7.5% GDP growth can become a trend in the next 5 years
and describes India as an Elephant turning into a roaring tiger.

THE TIGER PUSHING THE THROTTLE


According to the Keynesian theory of economics,
GDP = C + I + G + Xn
C = consumption, I = investment, G = government spending and Xn = net exports.
An increase in any of these gets further magnified due to the multiplier effect. Currently firing on
all four cylinders, India is already the fastest growing economy. It is tipped to grow at 7.5% in
2016 by the World Bank. India is a services and consumption-based economy. Private
consumption expenditure is expected to rise to $2.4 trillion in 2018-19 from $1 trillion in 201314. The IIP (Index of Industrial Production) boomed from 3% to 9.8% from April to November
in 2015. The overall composite PMI (Purchasing Managers Index) attaining its 11 month high at
53.3 indicates expansion. On the expenditure front, both the investment and consumption have
boomed. At the India Investment Summit, Finance Minister Jaitley pleased the optimists by
announcing that the government has eased processes.
Time Period

Oil imports (billion $)

First 8 months of FY2015


First 8 months of FY2016

107
61

Oil related exports


(billion $)
44
21

(billion $)
-63
-40

The decrease in net exports Xn paints a positive picture. China had been the driver of oil markets
for many years. Its appetite for crude has reduced owing to slowdown. According to brokerage
CLSA, India can add at least 3%, that is, $60 billion to the GDP if the oil prices stay at current
levels as crude constitutes 79% of Indias imports. Goldman Sachs is betting that the prices will
plunge to $20 per barrel so India has every reason to be optimistic. India has the potential to
gallop amid global economic turmoil.
A skilled English speaking workforce has led to Indias emergence as a global outsourcing hub.
The IT sector earning $146 billion during FY2015, clocking a growth rate of 23.72%, is a clear
comparative advantage. Jack Welch (CEO, GE) rightly observed that Indias real treasure is its
intellectual capital. An expanding talent pool can boost innovation and R&D. The talent pool
has grown at a CAGR of 9.4% from 2008-2015 and Indias advantage in the high-tech sector is
sustainable. China, on the other hand, has always been accused of resorting to reverse

engineering or being ineffective in enforcing intellectual property rights. In fact, one leukemia
drug costing $9000 in US sells for $70 in India, which must be ascribed to the latters patent law.
Actually, many Indian drugs cost a modest fraction of that of US drugs. Thus, not only is the
economy healthy, but even maintaining health is economical in India.
Indias consumption is propelled by its impressive purchasing power parity in which it ranks
third in the world. Its market for medium and heavy commercial vehicles, a barometer of
economic activity, increased by 36% in 2015 while sales of passenger cars rose by 11.4%.
Having already trounced Europe in production and retail sales of automobiles, India is set to
overtake Japan in entry level car production in 4 years. Hardcore frugal engineering is the name
of the game here. The Renault Kwid topped the charts owing to affordability. India is expected to
emerge as the third largest automobile market by 2020. The highly underserved subcompact
SUV segment is another gold mine. India surpassed the US as worlds second largest smartphone
market. Apples sales in India expanded by 76% in the last quarter of 2015 making them turn
their focus to India from China.
As staunch advocates of equality, Indians aim to serve all markets alike. Besides aggressively
acquiring gigantic firms in US, they are also eyeing Japans expanding market as the age and
vulnerability of the Japanese population grows. While the global pharmaceuticals sector will
grow at 5%, the Indian sector promises an incredible CAGR of 15.92%. The Indian
pharmaceuticals market, already third in the world in terms of volume, is set to reach $100
billion by 2025. The sector is blessed by backing from the government which has launched a
$150 million venture capital fund to aid startups. It aims to reduce the reliance on imports of
active pharmaceutical ingredients, 85% of which come from China.
Indian Company
Lupin
Cipla

Acquired US companies
Gavis Pharmaceuticals LLC,
Novel Laboratories Inc.
InvaGen Pharmaceuticals Inc.,
Exelan Pharmaceuticals Inc.

Total Valuation
(in million US $)
880
550

Medical tourism, a budding sector, is expected to boom to $8 billion by FY2020 from a decent
$3 billion in FY2015. India has an array of world-class doctors making it the favorite against
nemesis Thailand and other counterparts like Singapore and Malaysia.

OVERTAKING THE DRAGON


Employing economies of scale worked wonders for China. External economies of scale resulted
in cost reduction as particular areas manufactured similar products. For instance, most of the
worlds cigarette lighters are produced in a single town in China. This led to the development of
specialized skills along with a dense network of suppliers. Thus, Chinese were approaching
productive efficiency. Indian cities are following suit as Gurgaon and Chennai continue to chase
the Detroit of India-Pune where Tata Motors is the largest automotive company followed by

Bajaj Auto, Force Motors, Mahindra Two-Wheelers, Mercedes-Benz, GM, JCB construction
equipment, Volkswagen, M&M, Premier Motors and Fiat. In the IT industry, Bangalore and
Pune are the cities exhibiting external economies of scale. There were 202 operational SEZs in
India on 31/03/2015. Indian government understands that SEZs are a means of promoting
industrialization and economic growth through sustainable development. Thus, the commerce
ministry has supported the measures that boost SEZs.
Chinas success story was based on mammoth public infrastructural investments. The Indian
tiger has its task cut out. The National Infrastructure Investment Fund, which has an initial
corpus of Rs 40,000 crores, shall be a highly active investor in infrastructure in 2016. Indias
railway budget mentioned that 917 road bridges (both over-bridges and under-bridges) are to be
constructed for replacing 3438 railway crossings. Prime Minister Modi has launched multiple
projects Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation (Amrut), Smart Cities
Mission, and Housing for All Mission in Urban Areas.
China has consistently invested in its port facilities to enhance its geographic advantages. Indian
Transport minister Gadkari plans to do precisely the same thing- develop the ports, through the
Sagarmala project. India certainly wants to leave no stone unturned in infrastructural
development. Besides, building low-cost airports, rebuilding of roadways is underway for
domestic commuters. Also, the government aims to award projects worth Rs 300,000 crores
through hybrid projects or public private partnerships. India being a capitalist economy, the
private sector has jumped into the contest. A Credit Suisse report claimed that Reliance alone has
built 28,000-30,000 towers comprising a mix of ground based towers and poles for 4G.
Project / Investment

Allocated Investment amount (Rs in crores)

Ports
Rebuild Roadways
Railways
Housing for All
Non-metro airports

70,000
12,000
6,581
4,000
1,500

*1 crore = 100 Lakh = 10,000 thousand


Incidentally, the year of the monkey marks the commencement of the metal cycle according to
Chinese astrology and has turned the tide in Indias favor as metals are available abundantly.
Prime Minister Modis belief India's progress is our destiny seems plausible. China is the
biggest consumer of copper and aluminum and among the largest for most other commodities.
Barring coal, China is below the worlds per capita average in all critical resources. The purchase
of resources was funded by their substantial export earnings till now. Chinas exports dropped by
6.8% and imports declined by 8.7% in November 2015. This had negative multiplier effects on
the economy. The investments in infrastructure have become even more lucrative as commodity
prices will thus continue to plummet.

An overcapacity of 550 million tonnes of steel globally meant that the prices slumped to a 12
year low. They have plunged from the 2008-09 high of $744 to below $300 in 2015.
China has a vast excess capacity of 250-300 million tonnes. India, being the only nation among
the 10 major steel consumers to have posted growth in 2015, is the destination to park
inventories. Actually, India is in a highly enviable position currently as it continues to literally
dictate the terms of trade. For circumventing the free trade agreements with Korea and Japan, a
safeguard duty of 20% was imposed on the steel products imported from Korea, Japan and China
for 200 days. Proposing a minimum import price for steel after imposing the above mentioned
20% import duty in order to protect the domestic industry was bureaucratic genius.
Indias infrastructure deficit amounts to $1 trillion. Thus, the National Infrastructure Investment
Fund (NIIF) intends to leverage Rs 20,000 crores to Rs 400,000 crores (20 times). They realize
that the Indian infrastructure sector warrants an increase in equity investments. The government
needs to provide some flexibility in the pricing of infrastructure projects. Those proposing the
theory that this would lead to a monopoly thus increasing the prices of many other commodities
and thus inflation are perhaps being a tad naive. Regulating monopoly is second nature to us
democratic Indians.
Chinas aces were labor, productivity and capital. After peaking in 2012, age became a deterrent
as the one child policy woefully backfired. Also, the rising wages mean that India is likely to
displace China in terms of wage competitiveness. The rise in productivity has become sluggish.
Capital investment peaked in 2012 and the investment overshooting thereafter has led to the
decline. The fact that these investments were funded through unregulated finance from shadow
banks worsened matters. With wizard Raghuram Rajan cleaning up the NPAs currently and
introducing gold monetization schemes to curtail the imports of gold, Indias banking sector
looks incredible in comparison. The RBI kept the Indian ship steady when most economies
drowned during the 2008 crisis.
A key advantage is the descending debt to GDP ratio of India, when the same is on the rise in
China. No wonder Krugman says that India shows greater resilience than China and that China
scares him.
Household debt accounts for a towering 65% of Chinas GDP. Excess capacity and low demand
has resulted in the bursting of the real estate bubble. Meanwhile, Indian construction sector grew
by 4% in the first half of 2015. The housing sector will reach the $1.2 trillion mark by 2020. It is
certainly lucrative as investments and acquisitions suggest. Birla acquired RInfra Cement
recently.

CRUISING AHEAD
Democracy is Indias biggest asset. Social unrest has increased in China due to rising
expectations of citizens. Chinas budget for maintaining domestic peace rivals its military
budget. Meanwhile, socially sensitive India proactively ordained that 2% of corporate profits be
allocated to CSR projects. Moreover, the entire world wants to be in Indias clout as India is

redefining foreign relations. India entering into strategic partnerships with US, Russia and
Germany at the same time reiterates this fact. India increased their bonhomie with oil partners
such as Iran and UAE, while civil nuclear cooperation agreements with Australia and Japan
elevated Indias profile.
Initiatives like Make in India and Digital India will enrich India by generating enormous
employment and breaking even domestically itself. With an aim to increase the contribution of
manufacturing to the GDP from 16% to 25%, Make in India is also poised to generate 100
million jobs by 2022. The government receiving proposals worth Rs 110,000 crores from a range
of sectors reaffirm that the initiative is a sensation. After Huawei and Xiaomi, IPad and IPhone
manufacturer Foxconn will open manufacturing units in India.
Meanwhile, Digital Indias share in Indias GDP will reach $1 trillion in 2025. It is expected to
provide jobs to 17 million by 2025. An overwhelming response was on the cards given that India
is worlds second largest internet market. Microsoft will provide low cost technology to 500,000
Indian villages while Google has agreed to provide free Wi-Fi at 500 railway stations.
A $1.5 billion fund has been launched to aid startups. They have also been exempted from tax on
profit for the first 3 years. As many as 114 startups filed series A rounds in 2015 with an
aggregate funding of $542 million. The surge in the number of startups in India should be
ascribed to the business friendly climate and role models like Flipkart ($15 billion) and Snapdeal
($6.5 billion). Thus, the factor of production Entrepreneurial ability is increasing in India.
Indias average age will be 29 years by 2020. US and China will be distant seconds with 37. An
increase by a million every year will make Indias workforce peak at 653 million in 2031. IMF
observes that by harnessing this demographic advantage, India can increment their per capita
GDP by 2% till 2033. Meanwhile, India is set to have the largest student population by 2025
according to British Council Research. Chinas resource endowment comprises a huge
population of unskilled and semiskilled labor with a relative paucity of engineering talent. No
wonder, their products are more standardized than sophisticated. Among Chinas top 10 exports
to US, 6 are simple goods. The dragon reaped the benefit of scales till now.
With green companies such as Enel Green Power investing in India, its growth will be
sustainable. India aims to develop 175 GW of renewable energy by 2022 to reduce its
dependence on coal besides protecting the environment.

CONCLUSION
Angus Maddison in his book The World Economy: A Millennial Perspective, remarked that the
polities of India constituted the biggest economy in the world from ca. 1 CE to 1000 CE. During
the period when China was the leading economy in the world, India donned the second position.
In The Tempest by William Shakespeare, Act II, scene I, the character of Antonio utters the
phrase what's past is prologue. With the dragon slowing down, the tiger would exclaim Very
apt Antonio!

REFERENCES

http://www.ibef.org/industry

http://www.dnaindia.com/money/

http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/

http://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/

http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com

http://www.hindustantimes.com/business/

http://www.thehindu.com/business/Economy/

http://www.rediff.com/business/

http://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/

http://gadgets.ndtv.com/apps/features/
http://www.thepharmaletter.com/listing/mergers-acquisitions/

https://www.timeshighereducation.com/news/

http://www.sezindia.nic.in/

Magazines: Frontline, Business Today, Forbes

International Economics Sixth Edition by James Gerber

By,
Amogh Sathye
NMIMS Mumbai
MBA 2015-17

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