Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

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csaurabh
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by csaurabh »

Suraj wrote: Robotics etc are esoteric cutting edge technologies that won't over human roles tomorrow.
Hardly esoteric.
Most manufacturing is done by robots nowadays in modern factories. This also means that factories are moving back to the developed world ( since it costs as much to run a robot in the USA ad in China ).
Make in India, if successful, will boost production, but not boost jobs. There may be less jobs, in fact.

Read this
http://www.livemint.com/Industry/xtzo7w ... oor-t.html
New Delhi: In a sweltering factory in southern India, Royal Enfield motorcycles are being painted and lacquered by giant robotic arms that move at twice the maximum speed of a human limb, day in, day out, never making a mistake.

Only a few workers are still needed on the paint line at Royal Enfield Motors Ltd’s plant in Oragadam, doing touch-ups on the iconic two-wheelers coveted for their classic design. Four robots can do the work of 15 human painters toiling across three shifts.

Robots and automation are invigorating once-sleepy Indian factories, boosting productivity by carrying out low-skill tasks more efficiently. While in theory, improved output is good for economic growth, the trend is creating a headache for Prime Minister Narendra Modi: Robots are diminishing roles for unskilled labourers that he wants to put to work as part of his ‘Make in India’ campaign aimed at creating jobs for the poor.

India’s largely uneducated labour force and broken educational system aren’t ready for the more complex jobs that workers need when their low-skilled roles are taken over by machines. Meanwhile, nations employing robots more quickly, such as China, are becoming even more competitive.

“The need for unskilled labour is beginning to diminish,” Akhilesh Tilotia, head of thematic research at Kotak Institutional Equities in Mumbai and author of a book on India’s demographic impact. “Whatever education we’re putting in and whatever skill development we’re potentially trying to put out—does it match where the industry will potentially be five to 10 years hence? That linkage is reasonably broken in India.”

Competing tasks

Improving automation will “likely compete with some low- skill tasks,” Standard Chartered Plc economists in London and Toronto wrote in a May report.

Royal Enfield Motors’ plant, near Chennai, is an example. Spray painting is a repetitive and hazardous job, perfect for a machine. Done manually, it exposes labourers to noxious, dizzying paint fumes that can impair memory and cognitive function.

Humans are imperfect: They miss spots, which can corrode the bike. They waste more because they go over the same place twice. No human can paint exactly the same way each time.

Robots installed by Zurich-based ABB Ltd at Royal Enfield’s newest plant in Tamil Nadu have 2.1- meter (7-foot) mechanical arms that reduce paint wastage by half. At maximum speed, they paint four times faster. They never miss a spot, never take a break, never go on strike.

Nimble production

Robots also mean more nimble production in an era of frequent product launches and shorter manufacturing cycles: while a human needs to be retrained, a robot can switch at a touch of a button.

“Large manufacturing plants can really struggle to find enough stable, skilled blue-collar workers that can do repetitive tasks day in, day out,” said Per Vegard Nerseth, ABB’s global head of robotics. “Turnover is very high, so you have a huge task training people, which incurs costs. That makes the payback for robots more favourable for a company.”

The Oragadam plant started with four painting robots in 2013 and plans to add 14 more as it expands. Both Royal Enfield and ABB declined to disclose the cost of the machines but said the investment will pay for itself in about two years.

Royal Enfield’s motorcycles, ridden by British troops in World War II, have cult appeal among enthusiasts, and the waiting list to buy one has been as long as a year. Fans who have owned one include Brad Pitt and Billy Joel.

Its older plant further north has also recently added four welding robots, which do in 20 seconds what takes two minutes for a human. The company declined to say how many workers were displaced or whether it has further automation plans for the facility, at Tiruvottiyur.

New jobs

While displacing some types of jobs, robots also create new ones, like engineers to maintain and programme them. A study by industrial analysis firm Metra Martech Ltd shows they help create more jobs than they eliminate from the assembly line.

India can use the help. Labour productivity in Indian factories is the worst among major economies, according to a report by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) and the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII). Brazilians, who ranked second to last, are still three times more productive than Indian workers.

Robot installations in India grew 23% in 2013 from the previous year, with annual sales hitting a record 1,900, the latest figures available from the International Federation of Robotics. That’s just a fraction of China. About 56,000 units were sold last year alone in the world’s biggest robot market, where factories including iPhone producer Foxconn Technology Group are helping China keep its manufacturing edge against lower-wage rivals.

Losing out

Still, robots have barely penetrated India and China relative to the size of their labour forces. Rather, Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia lead developing Asian nations in robot density—the number of industrial robots for every 10,000 manufacturing workers, according to IFR data.

“There’s the threat of India losing out,” said Madhur Jha, senior economist at Standard Chartered in London. “Other countries are slightly more developed, have a stronger manufacturing base, and are moving toward automation more quickly to keep themselves competitive.”

When Modi announced his Make in India campaign in September, he cited India’s “greatest strength” as having 65% of the population under 35.

That demographic dividend may not pay out as expected.

For one, India’s working-age population is increasing far faster than the number of jobs in the formal sector: roughly 1 million a month versus 1 million a year, according to a report by JustJobs Network, a labor research institute.

Stealing jobs

It’s also not clear if factories planned today will create the number and type of jobs that Modi is expecting.

“If you build a factory today assuming that it will create 100 jobs, in the course of 10 years as new technologies are adopted, it may create only 10% or 20% of the jobs you expected,” said Makoto Yokoyama, the head of Mitsubishi Electric Corp.’s factory automation division in India, who has witnessed Japan’s car plants employ fewer and fewer workers.

“It’d be a lie to say that robots won’t steal jobs,” said Sonali Kulkarni, who heads the India unit of Fanuc Corp., one of the world’s biggest robot makers. “They will, but not the jobs that people should be aspiring to. People are capable of really a lot more than mindlessly loading or unloading from a machine or welding.”

Yet India is failing to educate its illiterate 287 million—greater than the population of every other country except China and the US—to do much more than that.

Unemployable grads

The average Indian adult has been schooled for only 4.4 years, the worst among Asia’s major developing economies, according to United Nations data. Worse, half of the 5 million graduating annually with bachelor’s degrees are unemployable because of poor cognitive and language skills, according to a study by Aspiring Minds, a skills-assessment company. Larsen and Toubro Ltd (L&T), India’s biggest engineering firm, is forced to train new hires from scratch.

“The challenge for many emerging markets, like India, will not be to create low-cost jobs, but to make use of its gigantic human potential through broader and better education,” said Antoine van Agtmael, a former World Bank economist who coined the term emerging markets and is writing a book on automation undermining the advantage of cheap labour.

In the race to create factory jobs, Modi isn’t just competing against Asian rivals. Robots are increasingly helping developed economies. In Switzerland, robots make toothbrushes for export; in Spain, they cut and pack lettuce heads—a job previously done by migrants; in Germany, they fill tubs of ice cream, and in the UK they assemble yogurt into multipacks at a rate of 80 a minute.

Tharman Shanmugaratnam, chairman of the International Monetary Fund’s policy advisory committee until March and Singapore’s finance minister, gives India—and rivals such as Thailand, Vietnam and Malaysia—a fast-closing window to catch up with rich countries or miss the boat.

“Time is not on India’s side,” he told Indian policymakers at a government conference in December. “I give 10 years for labour-intensive manufacturing to survive in its present form before machines take over.”
Suraj
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Suraj »

Supratik wrote:I will beg to differ. IMO, India has missed that bus.
This has been quoted against every new entrant. In 2001 it was China being quoted as being too late to benefit from export-led growth. Back then, the developed world was in a funk from the dot com bust too.
csaurabh wrote:Make in India, if successful, will boost production, but not boost jobs. There may be less jobs, in fact.
Fine, let's hold you to that assertion then. Its your argument after all.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by vivek.rao »

There will be automation and will reduce the growth percentage of manufacturing jobs.

But at the same time will increase jobs in lot of other sector: packaging,servicing,sales/marketing,export industry,customer service, transport/shipping,warehousing,business development...
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by gakakkad »

i don't know if anyone noticed this or not but there has been a 30% growth in internet users in last 1 year...By next year india will have twice the number of internet users as US and is all set to have a greater penetration than panda..

http://www.internetlivestats.com/intern ... y-country/
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Suraj »

Core sector grows 5.7% in February
In what could reverse a three-month decline in industrial production, eight core sector industries surged to a 15-month high of 5.7 per cent in February, almost double the 2.9 per cent of January. These industries had expanded by 2.3 per cent in February 2015.

Official data issued on Thursday showed only one segment, steel, had a fall in February output against three — crude oil, natural gas and steel — in January.

The Index of Industrial Production (IIP), in which these industries have a weight of almost 38 per cent, contracted for November, December and January. It implies that if the remaining 62 per cent of the IIP does reasonably well, industrial production would show a high in February. However, there is not always a one-to-one relationship between core sector industries and the IIP. Many other segments, particularly capital goods, are volatile.

For instance, the core sector rose at the same rate of 3.2 per cent in September and October 2015 but the IIP rose 3.5 per cent in September and 9.9 per cent in October. Similarly, core sector industries declined in November but rose in December and January; however, IIP contracted in each of these three months.

Two of the eight industries — fertiliser and cement — expanded by double-digits. The former grew 16.3 per cent and the latter by 13.5 per cent. The low base of the previous year — a contraction of 0.4 per cent in fertiliser and growth of 2.2 per cent in cement — pushed up the numbers this February. Electricity generation was just short of double-digit growth at 9.2 per cent and on a reasonably good base of 5.9 per cent.
Normal rain might mean 6% agri growth
The country’s agriculture and allied sector’s growth could jump five-fold in 2016-17, to six per cent, if there’s a normal monsoon this year, said NITI Aayog member Ramesh Chand.

Six per cent would be the highest for the farm and allied sector in the gross domestic product series launched with the base year of 2011-12, against the earlier one of 2004-05.

The farm sector had contracted by 0.25 per cent in 2014-15 and is estimated to have grown 1.2 per cent in 2015-16. It was 4.2 per cent in 2013-14.

Annual expansion has been less than two per cent in the first four years of the 12th Five-Year Plan (2012-17) against a target of four per cent. This was largely due to droughts in 2014 and 2015, pulling down agricultural production and leading to overall distress in rural areas.

Recent weather predictions indicate the El Niño weather phenomenon, which caused the droughts, is on the wane. With a normal monsoon, the area under crops will increase and so will the productivity.
Highest ever urea output of 24.5 mt in FY16
India had its highest-ever urea production of 24.5 million tonnes in 2015-16. This could lead to reduction of import by two mt, the government said on Thursday.

Production was 22.5 mt in 2014-15. Ananth Kumar, the minister, said the next target should be produce 31 mt annually in the next two-three years, negating the need for any import. "In the past year, a silent urea revolution has taken place in the country...a remarkable achievement," he said.

Urea's now-compulsory neem coating was also acting as an insecticide and benefiting soil health, he said.

Annual domestic demand is estimated at 30 mt. Production had been stagnant in recent years at around 22 mt a year. The rest is met through import. The government is reviving units closed earlier to boost domestic production.

Urea is a controlled fertiliser and is sold at a fixed Rs 5,360 a tonne. The difference with cost of production is paid as a subsidy to manufacturers.
Major relaxation in GMS as govt allows long term deposits to be redeemed in gold at maturity
In a major relaxation in gold deposit scheme, the Reserve Bank of India today allowed banks to redeem gold deposited under the scheme in form of gold when deposit is for medium or long term. This was a major demand from temple boards. So far the provision of redeeming gold deposits under the scheme in form of gold or returning gold on maturity was allowed only for short term deposits of short term of 1-3 years.

Temples were demanding option to ask for gold on maturity in medium and long term deposits also as returns there were 2.25 to 2.5 per cent compared to much lower returns in short term. So far medium and long term deposits have to be redeemed only in cash equivalent to price of gold at the time of maturity.

Today RBI amended gold monetisation scheme giving option of getting gold or cash at maturity. However when a depositor asks for gold at maturity in gold, "an administrative charge at a rate of 0.2% of the notional redemption amount in terms of INR shall be collected from the depositor. However, the interest accrued on MLTGD shall be calculated with reference to the value of gold in terms of Indian Rupees at the time of deposit and will be paid only in cash," said RBI.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by A_Gupta »

Given all the uncertainties with technology, world markets, etc., the task is to make the conditions as conducive as possible to economic growth of all kinds.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Karthik S »

Good article about CRR, or the fractional banking system.

http://swarajyamag.com/economy/not-mall ... on-5-april
Under current RBI norms, banks have to maintain a CRR of 4 percent of their total demand and time liabilities with the central bank. As on 4 March, demand and time liabilities (excluding inter-bank deposits) were of the order of Rs 94 lakh crore. Four percent of that would be around Rs 3.75 lakh crore (all approximate figures, since these numbers vary from day to day). This figure is almost equal to the gross non-performing assets (NPAs) of public sector banks as at the end of December 2015.
Wouldn't it be better if the banks are allowed to invest the excess reserve in infrastructure projects, foreign bonds or even invest a portion of it in stock market to make more money?
subhamoy.das
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by subhamoy.das »

gakakkad wrote:i don't know if anyone noticed this or not but there has been a 30% growth in internet users in last 1 year...By next year india will have twice the number of internet users as US and is all set to have a greater penetration than panda..

http://www.internetlivestats.com/intern ... y-country/
This is phenomenal. We are surely moving in a stealthy mode. The amount of hype generated when china overtook US points to paid media propaganda.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Singha »

Ibn

New Delhi: With its ranking going up by three places, India has now been ranked sixth among the world's 10 largest manufacturing countries, a UNIDO report has said.
The country previously held the 9th rank.
The Yearbook, published by the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), finds that in India, the Manufacturing Value Added (MVA) grew by 7.6% in 2015 compared to the previous year.
It also said that the quarterly index of industrial production (IIP) shows 1% growth of manufacturing output in the fourth quarter of 2015 compared to the same period of previous year.
"India is now the sixth largest manufacturer in the world," the report said.
The report also said that the global growth rate of manufacturing production has slowed to 2.8% in 2015.

"This slowdown could be due to reduced manufacturing growth rates recorded by major developing and emerging economies," it added.
China tops the list of 10-top industrial producers followed by the US, Japan, Germany and Korea. Indonesia was at the bottom of the list
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by subhamoy.das »

Great news!
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by nash »

100 GW solar capacity by 2017-end likely: Piyush Goyal

Read more at:
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/art ... aign=cppst

is it a typo or tongue slip or reality? :shock:
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by JTull »

nash wrote:100 GW solar capacity by 2017-end likely: Piyush Goyal

Read more at:
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/art ... aign=cppst

is it a typo or tongue slip or reality? :shock:
It is correct. PM had targeted 100GW by 2022. From 2.5GW they're already upto 19GW. No reason to doubt this as Power Ministry would likely have a clear view of the pipeline of current and future projects.

This must be seen in the context of China. Few years ago they were adding 100GW every year - more than India's entire installed capacity. We're little bit late in the curve but we're definitely accelerating. Good news is that unlike China, which was mostly coal driven, we're doing it in large chunks of non-greenhouse emitting technologies.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by nash »

JTull wrote:
It is correct. PM had targeted 100GW by 2022. From 2.5GW they're already upto 19GW. No reason to doubt this as Power Ministry would likely have a clear view of the pipeline of current and future projects.
Actually, I have doubt about the bold part:

http://scroll.in/article/805970/as-wash ... ian-market

as per Central Electricity Authority of India/Ministry of New and Renewable Energy

Installed capacity of solar power by 2015-16 : 5.2GW
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by JTull »

I agree that installed capacity does seem at about 5GW but approvals under the Nation Solar Mission now stand at 19GW. Gestation time for solar projects is short but this 100GW by 2017 itself does indeed look over-optimistic. Looking at the following I don't understand what has changed in a month?

Approved solar parks up at 33 in 21 states; solar power capacity crosses 5,000 MW: Piyush Goyal
The total number of approved solar parks has risen to 33 in 21 states with an aggregate capacity of 19,900 MW, an official statement said on Saturday.

"As against 25 solar parks planned, the ministry (of new and renewable energy) has approved 33 solar parks in 21 states with aggregate capacity of 19,900 MW," said Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI) managing director Ashvini Kumar in a statement.

The SECI is the implementing agency and has already released Rs.54.93 crore to respective states from the sanctioned Rs.374 crore.

Power and New and Renewable Energy Minister Piyush Goyal told a parliamentary consultative committee of his ministry that installed solar power capacity in India has crossed 5,000 MW in January and would achieve the target of 18,000 MW by the end of 2017

At the meeting held in Tirupati, he said India initiated the world's largest renewable energy programme by increasing the existing 3,500 MW by five-fold to 175 GW to be achieved by 2022.

The meeting also attended by MPs Bharat Singh, Om Prakash Yadav, Sushil Kishore Singh and Jayadev Galla reviewed the progress made by Solar Park Scheme and National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC) measures aimed at reducing emissions.

MNRE Secretary Upendra Tripathy said the ministry has launched several projects like Scheme for Development of Solar Parks to achieve 20 GW through ultra mega solar parks.

Top executive from MNRE, NTPC and National Hydroelectric Power Corporation (NHPC) gave presentations gave presentations on their initiatives.
Just tweeted the minister. Let's see if he responds.
Last edited by JTull on 02 Apr 2016 21:53, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Supratik »

deleted
hanumadu
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by hanumadu »

This is what I posted in another thread.
Modi promised complete electrification in about 3 years from Aug 2015. Piyush Goyal is on record saying it will complete by Mar 2017 - less than two years. I wonder if he can achieve 24/7 electricity before 2019, 175 GW renewable energy before 2022 etc etc.
I think 100GW solar energy is a possibility before 2019 GE. 40GW of it is supposed to be roof top.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Vipul »

India jumps to sixth place in top-10 manufacturers list.

With its ranking going up by three places, India has now been ranked sixth among the world's 10 largest manufacturing countries, a UNIDO report has said. The country previously held the 9th rank.

The Yearbook, published by the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), finds that in India, the Manufacturing Value Added (MVA) grew by 7.6 per cent in 2015 compared to the previous year.

It also said that the quarterly index of industrial production ( IIP) shows 1 per cent growth of manufacturing output in the fourth quarter of 2015 compared to the same period of previous year.

"India is now the sixth largest manufacturer in the world," the report said.

The report also said that the global growth rate of manufacturing production has slowed to 2.8 per cent in 2015.

"This slowdown could be due to reduced manufacturing growth rates recorded by major developing and emerging economies," it added.

China tops the list of 10-top industrial producers followed by the US, Japan, Germany and Korea. Indonesia was at the bottom of the list.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Yagnasri »

Several items here can go to achievement thread.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by JohnTitor »

JTull wrote: Just tweeted the minister. Let's see if he responds.
x-post from power thread.

https://youtu.be/HUw3uPRoTSw?t=788

It is 100GW by 2022 & 20GW by 2017.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Suraj »

RBI decision clears hurdle for temples
The new Gold Monetisation Scheme (GMS) is expected to get a better response from temples after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)’s announcement on Thursday to allow redeeming of gold under the scheme when the deposit is for the medium or long term.

Many banks are still waiting for their board of directors’ to approve GMS products, after which they will sign tripartite agreements with refineries and collection centres.

SBI is among a few banks that have started getting gold under the new scheme, as it was already running old GMS, and those getting matured under the old scheme are also deposited under the new scheme.

So far, redeeming in the form of the metal or by returning gold on maturity was allowed only for short-term deposits of one to three years. Some temples, including the richest one, Tirumala in Andhra Pradesh, have opted for this but only in a small way.

Indian temples are estimated to have a combined 3,000 to 4,000 tonnes of gold. Including unofficial shipments, India imports a little over 1,000 tonnes of gold every year.
Consumer loans become cheaper as banks adopt new rate formula
Consumer loans Friday became cheaper with banks moving to a new way of setting lending rates following RBI's diktat to ensure faster and effective transmission of its policy rate cuts to borrowers.

A number of banks, including ICICI, Bank of India, IDBI today joined their peers like SBI, HDFC Bank and Axis Bank to make a shift to lending rates based on marginal cost of funds.

Other banks that have adopted new methodology for calculating lending rates include Kotak Mahindra Bank, Yes Bank and Oriental Bank of Commerce.

Banking major SBI, HDFC Bank, Axis Bank, among others yesterday said that they would move to new methodology for setting lending rates from April 1.

RBI had asked banks to price fixed rate loans of up to three years based on marginal cost of funds from April 1.
Small savings schemes interest cut signals better fiscal alignment: SMERA
The small and medium enterprises (SME) credit rating agency SMERA Rating has projected a repo cut of 25 bps in the April 5 policy meeting amid improved effectiveness of India's fiscal policy in further loosening of the monetary policy.

According to SMERA, the interest rate cut of 0.4 per cent to 0.9 per cent across the 12 government backed small saving schemes for 2016-17 signals a better alignment between the fiscal and monetary side of the economy.

In its outlook report SMERA said, "This move which was a long- standing demand by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) will raise commercial banks' ability to lower their deposit rates and consequently, the lending rate when the RBI cuts the repo rate."

Until now, despite 1.25 per cent cut in the repo rate since January 2015, the banks have passed on an average only 0.6 per cent to the public in terms of lower lending rates.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Neshant »

RBI decision clears hurdle for temples
Every scheme of trading gold for paper suggested by private banking interests, inevitably it ends up as a ripoff.

What happens when the private bank which has "borrowed" this gold goes bankrupt or is nearing bankruptcy and is unable to return the gold they have "borrowed".

It looks like a ripoff scheme where banks can borrow, gamble, make profits and leave the temples holding the bag.. or the taxpayer holding the bag for replacing the temples gold.

2 times in history, India has built up a large stockpile of gold in its temples only to see it stolen. First by the muslim invaders, 2nd by the British, this looks to be the third round by private banker chicanery.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Prem »

CNBC-TV18 ‏@CNBCTV18Live 11m11 minutes ago
just In: India March Nikkei Manufacturing PMI At 52.4 Vs 51.1 (MoM)
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Suraj »

Manufacturing growth recovers in March with PMI at 8 month high of 52.4
India's manufacturing growth registered an uptick in March mainly due to rise in new orders after remaining unchanged in February.

The Nikkei purchasing managers’ index (PMI) survey showed manufacturing at an eight month high of 52.4 after the 51.1 points reading in February. This is a third consecutive monthly improvement in business conditions across the sector.

The seasonally adjusted is a composite single figure indicator of manufacturing performance and a reading above 50 represents expansion while one below this level means contraction. Manufacturing had contracted last in December at 49.1 points.
India factory activity at eight-month high in March on strong demand
The Nikkei/Markit Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index rose to an eight-month high of 52.4 in March from February's 51.1, its third straight month above the 50 mark that separates growth from contraction.

The findings "provide welcome reassurance that the sector has moved farther away from the flood-related contraction seen in December," said Pollyanna De Lima, an economist at Markit.

Severe rainfall and flooding caused widespread destruction in late November and early December, which constrained output to its lowest since early 2009.

The latest survey showed the new orders sub-index, a proxy for domestic demand, also rose to an eight-month high of 53.9 in March from 52.3, encouraging firms to increase output. Foreign demand also rose though at a slightly more moderate pace.

Stronger demand allowed firms to raise prices of their goods at the fastest pace in 16 months to make up for rising input costs, a trend likely to get some notice at the central bank.
An excellent reflection of priorities - execution matters more than devising new projects:
Govt to focus on execution, go slow on new scheme launches
As the Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government pads up to enter its third year in office, its focus would be on key areas such as banking, defence, retail, manufacturing, infrastructure and job creation.

If the first two years were about announcing signature schemes and campaigns, and setting the agenda for the NDA, the next three are going to be about getting results from the schemes such as Make in India, Swachh Bharat, Smart Cities or Digital India.

Consolidation in the banking sector is high on the priority list of the government, because of the accumulating non-performing assets (NPAs).

Due diligence is in progress and the government is giving it a big push, said a source. Banking has been a weak link in the first two years of the NDA rule and the sector must show results in the remaining three years.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Singha »

DXB took Heathrow's title as the world's busiest international airport in 2014 and easily maintained the the crown last year.

Paul Griffiths, CEO of Dubai Airports, enthuses: “It was a another banner year for Dubai International where we broke records, engaged and entertained our customers in new ways, and retained our position as the world’s number one international hub.

"But we have no time to rest on our laurels as we are already busy testing the readiness our newest facility, the $1.2 billion Concourse D, which when it opens for our 70 plus airlines this quarter, will play a crucial role in helping us welcome millions of passengers in comfort and style.”

A traditionally strong market, India retained its position as Dubai’s single largest destination country in 2015 with 10.4 million passengers, a year-on-year growth of 17% compared to 8.9 million in 2014.

The UK was placed second with 5.6 million passengers (+6%) followed closely by Saudi Arabia at 5.4 million (+12%).

In terms of destination cities served by DXB, Doha retained the top spot with 2.7 million passengers (+18%) followed closely by London with 2.6 million (+1%) and Mumbai with 2.2 million passengers (+14%).
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Singha »

4th and 6th para above
Suraj
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Suraj »

Private sector investment to show improvement: FM Arun Jaitley
Private sector investments will show improvement and lead the economy in coming years, reducing the role of government in pushing growth, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said today.

Pinning hopes on various initiatives taken by the government to double farm income in the next five years, he said this would push up rural demand and revive private investments.

“Hopefully, this year the private sector investment and business environment improves. In the coming year, you (industry) lead…rather than the government leads the economy. That will be the ideal state for the Indian economy,” he said.

On doubling the farm income, he said: “Hopefully this should lead to increase in rural demand. And increased rural demand is going to fill in the holes as far as the economy is concerned and hopefully in reviving private sector investment in the economy.”
RBI policy review: Will Guv Raghuram Rajan go for 25 bps repo rate cut or 50 bps?
While the consensus is on a 25 basis points (bps) repo rate cut on Tuesday when the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) meets to review monetary policy, there is an outside chance that Governor Raghuram Rajan may effect a sharper cut at 50 bps. After all, inflation has been brought down to well within targeted levels of 6% by January 2016, the government has promised to rein in the fiscal deficit at 3.5% for FY17, interest rates on small-savings schemes have been trimmed and the US Fed has indicated the rise in the federal funds rates would be calibrated. Most important, GDP growth still looks sluggish; going by the old GDP series, the economy grew at an anaemic 4.6% in the three months to December, well below the potential 7-7.5%, though a normal monsoon will help push growth up by 75-100 bps. And factory output between April and January averaged just 2.7%, levels similar to that in FY15.

That would have to be the most compelling reason to snip 50 basis points off the repo, currently at 6.75%. To be sure, lower lending rates aren’t going to get companies to start adding capacity immediately. In a treacherous world, where most economies are slowing, it is hard to tell where prices of commodities are headed even in the near-term—companies can’t be expected to take on projects when they are unable to read the demand outlook clearly. And in any case there appears to be ample capacity in the economy that is not being used and can be cranked up should demand start rising faster. The high real interest rates, currently in the 11-12% levels, only make things worse since projects look that much more unviable. However, should banks be able to lower lending rates, it will ease some of the pressure on corporate bottomlines, enabling them to, a year or two down the line, think of investing. Moreover, it is possible consumers—especially beneficiaries of the 7th Pay Commission hike—will be spurred to purchase big-ticket items such as houses once interest rates are lowered.
Finmin lines up 16 PSUs for disinvestment; may fetch Rs 40,000 cr
Finance Ministry has drawn up a list of 16 PSUs including ONGC, Oil India and Coal India for disinvestment in 2016-17 which could fetch the exchequer Rs 40,000 crore at current stock value.

The list includes state-owned companies such as NMDC, MOIL, MMTC, National Fertilisers, NHPC, NALCO and Bharat Electronics, sources said.

Based on the current market prices, the stake sales could fetch the exchequer around Rs 40,000 crore.

The list mostly contains PSUs which were up for sale in the last fiscal itself but volatile market conditions delayed the plan. Besides, the Cabinet approvals are also in place for some of these PSUs.

“We have cabinet approval for stake sales. In PSUs which have excess cash, buy back is also an option for which we do not need a new approval,” a source said.

At the current market price, 10 per cent stake sale in Coal India, NMDC and Nalco could fetch around Rs 18,000 crore, Rs 3,800 crore and Rs 1,000 crore respectively.

Besides, 5 per cent stake sale in ONGC, BHEL and Bharat Electronics could raise about Rs 9,000 crore, Rs 1,300 crore and Rs 1,400 crore.

A 10 per cent stake sale in NHPC and MOIL could fetch around Rs 3,000 crore and Rs 365 crore.

Further, a 15 per cent stake sale in MMTC, National Fertiliser and STC could raise about Rs 560 crore, Rs 200 crore and Rs 80 crore respectively.

Besides, the government is also considering a 5 per cent stake sale in Rashtriya Chemicals & Fertilizers Ltd, 12.03 per cent in ITDC and a follow on public offer of NBCC.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Singha »

Ndtv
Bengaluru: Karnataka has been ranked as the country's top job creating state with over 24 per cent share during the fourth quarter of the last fiscal, according to a study.

It is followed by Maharashtra (23 per cent) and Tamil Nadu (10.5 per cent), said the study by Assocham.

Information technology (IT) sector created about 57 per cent of about nine lakh job openings recorded between January-March, 2016, followed by services (19 per cent) and manufacturing (11 per cent), according to the report.

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Banking, financial services and insurance (BFSI) sector accounted for just over eight per cent share followed by construction and real estate (3.5 per cent share).

Within Karnataka, ITEs accounted for over 65 per cent share in job openings across the state followed by services (16 per cent), manufacturing (eight per cent), BFSI (six per cent) and construction and real estate sector (2.5 per cent).

The Assocham Economic Research Bureau (AERB) had analysed the data sourced primarily from vacancies posted by companies via various job portals together with advertisements offering employment opportunities published in national and regional dailies across India.

Karnataka had recorded 2.16 lakh job openings in the first quarter of the last fiscal followed by Maharashtra (two lakh), Tamil Nadu (93,000), Andhra Pradesh and Telangana region combined (82,000) and Haryana (72,000).

Sector-wise, Karnataka leads in terms of job openings in ITES sector with 28 per cent share in over five lakh jobs created by the sector followed by Maharashtra (20.5 per cent), Tamil Nadu (11 per cent), Andhra Pradesh-Telangana (10 per cent) and Uttar Pradesh (eight per cent), it said.

Services sector recorded 1.69 lakh jobs in January-March quarter of 2015-16 with Maharashtra accounting for the "lion's share" of about 24 per cent followed by Karnataka (21 per cent), Haryana (8.4 per cent), Uttar Pradesh (8.2 per cent) and Andhra Pradesh-Telangana (8.1 per cent).

In manufacturing sector, Maharashtra has recorded highest share with 22.5 per cent in over 99,000 job openings, followed by Karnataka (19 per cent), Tamil Nadu (12 per cent), Andhra Pradesh-Telangana (nine per cent) and Gujarat (eight per cent).

Maharashtra also topped with highest share in job openings recorded in BFSI and construction and real estate with a share of about 31 per cent in both sectors each, while Karnataka followed with a share of 18 per cent and 17 per cent respectively, it added.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Singha »

So 3 superstates are creating 60% of jobs

And unlike TN and MH I bet 95% of ka new jobs are in blr
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Singha »

Blr is the golden goose for the congis.
Take it away and their cash flow will plummet
Leave them free and no Congress mukt Bharat possible as this golden cow will sustain many other campaigns
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by JTull »

There's a definite attempt at de-risking this dependence on blr, esp on defence side. Goa DefExpo is the first step.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Vipul »

Interesting info. Except for IT-Vity Maharashtra dominates in all sectors.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by chetak »

JTull wrote:There's a definite attempt at de-risking this dependence on blr, esp on defence side. Goa DefExpo is the first step.

The IAF at bangalore made noise hoping to upgrade it's facilities at yelahanka under guise of the aeroshow.

This may blow up in their faces as parrikar is trying to shift the aeroshow to goa, where presumably it may come under IN control.

the moving ungli can never be still, scratching itches in places where no itch exists :)

this will cost bangalore many tens of crores in terms of lost business and services.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Suraj »

As expected, RBi cut rates 0.25%:
http://www.business-standard.com/article/finance/rbi-cuts-repo-rate-by-25-bps-to-6-5-lowest-in-6-years-116040500179_1.html
In its first monetary policy review for the financial year 2016-17, the Reserve Bank of India announced a 25 basis point reduction in the repo, or repurchase rate, which is the rate at which banks borrow from the central bank. One basis point is one hundredth of a percentage point.

The repo rate now stands at 6.5%, the lowest it has been since March 2011. However, it reduced the minimum daily maintenance of the cash reserve ratio (CRR) from 95% of the requirement to 90% with effect from the fortnight beginning April 16, 2016.
Andy Mukherjee's take:
Indian Banks' Profit Escalator
India's monetary policy czar, Raghuram Rajan, has finally built his country's banks a profit escalator that's taking them up rather than down.

Lenders can now borrow short-term money more cheaply, advance longer-term funds at a higher premium, and use the additional profit to provide for past lending mistakes. Large industrial groups are still looking to cut leverage, but new borrowers, such as online retailers and a yoga guru's rapidly expanding consumer goods empire, could help financial institutions find fresh business. So long as the escalator doesn't stall, banks stuffed with zombie loans might be able to ride it to the land of the living.

For now, it looks like the moving staircase is speeding up. Today's widely expected quarter-percentage-point reduction in the central bank's policy rate takes the benchmark for Indian borrowing costs to its lowest in five years. Despite tight liquidity, rate cuts have had a fairly strong effect on the money market, with three-month treasury bills yielding nearly 1.5 percentage points less than they did before Reserve Bank of India Governor Rajan began pruning rates in January last year.

By comparison, 10-year government bond yields have fallen very little. The yield curve has shifted down, but equally importantly, it's sloped up. The downward shift means banks can acquire new customers by offering cheaper credit at all maturities; the steepening implies they can do so at a decent margin. That's a sweet spot for lenders who haven't had much good news over the last several years. Shares of as many as 28 of them -- including State Bank of India and Bank of Baroda, the country's largest and third-largest lenders by assets respectively -- trade for less than their book value.

It will take billions of dollars of fresh capital for India's banks to get healthy again. For lenders to be able to generate some of that from their own earnings, credit demand needs to pick up; it's unclear if a nascent revival in loans will endure in the absence of matching deposit growth. Besides, the 15 large Indian companies with the highest risk of default, according to a Bloomberg metric, paid five times more interest on their debt last year than in 2011. They certainly can't take on more loans.

But there are bright spots. Growing e-commerce inventories need financing, and a new law that gives superior consumer protection to home buyers may lead to stronger mortgage demand.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by svinayak »

WHEN IT COMES TO MANUFACTURING--

CHINA IS NO 1
USA IS NO 2
KOREA IS NO 3 (THANKS TO SAMSUNG )
INDIA IS NO 4 - India is still competitive. will be for next 50 years
GERMANY IS NO 5
JAPAN IS NO 6
member_22733
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by member_22733 »

Source? I believe there was one posted here two days back with Japan and Indias places switched.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Arunkumar »

JTull wrote:There's a definite attempt at de-risking this dependence on blr, esp on defence side. Goa DefExpo is the first step.
I dont think it was for de-risking from blr. Land-naval expo used to be held in pragati maidan in even years while aero-india was held in bangalore on odd years. Defence ministry or CII wanted a common venue and asked the states if land was available. Few states responded and Naqueri quitol in goa was selected even before parikkar was selected as def min. This coincidence is often spun by sections of secular media in a wrong light.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by deejay »

chetak wrote:
JTull wrote:There's a definite attempt at de-risking this dependence on blr, esp on defence side. Goa DefExpo is the first step.

The IAF at bangalore made noise hoping to upgrade it's facilities at yelahanka under guise of the aeroshow.

This may blow up in their faces as parrikar is trying to shift the aeroshow to goa, where presumably it may come under IN control.

the moving ungli can never be still, scratching itches in places where no itch exists :)

this will cost bangalore many tens of crores in terms of lost business and services.
IIRC, the IAF specifically said that they would be unable to hold AeroIndia at Yelahanka in future. No facility upgrade was demanded.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by schinnas »

X-post from another thread.
schinnas wrote: The recent moves of the government - enabling 100% FDI for pure marketplace play is a shot in the back for Snapdeal for the strategy it pursued. Amazon and Flipkart, though they called themselves as marketplaces were able to indulge in price wars primarily in two ways.

1. They owned stake in another company that was registered as a JV between the Ecommerce player having minority stake and a local player having majority stake. Ex: Amazon's Cloudtail which is majority invested by Narayana Murthy. Amazon literally pays 10%+ returns while selling the items for a loss to get market share. This model also allowed Amazon and Flipkart to get exclusive deals on specific inventory such as some top selling electronics or mobile phones which a pure marketplace could not.

2. Even when selling some vendor's products, Amazon and Flipkart (and Snapdeal as well) would reserve the right to sell it for a lower price than what they pay the vendor for. This enabled them to indulge in price wars.

Both these things were predatorial practices which will enable the company with the big pockets to pursue monopolistic practices to drive little guys out. Fortunately, our Gujju brained GoI saw through it and with two simple restrictions leveled the playing field. The restrictions are a) Marketplaces with foreign funding cannot have more than 25% of sales from one vendor (there goes Amazon's cloudtail and Flipkart's WS Retail), and b) Marketplaces with foreign funding cannot sell an item for a price less than they pay the vendor for.

These two will ensure that Amazon cannot gobble up the ECommerce marketshare in India. The game will need to be fought for the long term in terms of better customer support, better delivery and intuitive UX and creative marketing. Mindless price wars to drive out the competition is not possible. This leases new life into Flipkart and Snapdeal to survive for much longer without huge capital infusement if they streamline their operations better. Both of them need to improve the quality of their mid management (Director and VP types) and let go of excess fat they hired thinking sky high growth year over year.

Amazon and Flipkart have invested heavily in supply chain and fulfilment centers and these restrictions will hurt them. Snapdeal and other pure marketplace plays such as Indiaclues stand to benefit (assuming they are close to break-even and have some warchest left). Another interesting winner out of these developments is Infibeam, which recently went to IPO and is fully self funded by its founders until it went IPO. These changes by government enables lot of local players such as Pai Electricals in Bangalore or Vasant & Co in TN to play aggressively in eCommerce. Infibeam helps them by setting up and managing their eCommerce sites for them. They couldnt compete against Flipkart and amazon and few years ago diverted into this model as a means of staying alive but in hindsight may reap lot of long term rewards that the other well advertised names such as Flipkart may not in the longer term horizon.

More than eCommerce, I am more interested in emerging trends in social commerce and payment solutions which I believe are the next big things. Any industry veterans in those areas can perhaps share some scoops.
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Suraj »

A forward analysis of potential rate movement:
This is what will determine India’s next rate move
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Re: Indian Economy News & Discussion - Aug 26 2015

Post by Prem »

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