“Strength is weakness,”
said George Orwell
|
The Strengths are:
1.
The South-West Monsoon has been good this year providing boost to rural economy
and may bring down pressure on food prices
2.
Foreign exchange reserves at $278 billion are sufficient to cover about six
months of imports
3.
Steep fall in rupee may help India ’s
manufacturing sector with potential for higher exports provided Indian products
are priced competitively abroad
4.
Growing wealth effect: Spurred by
rising gold and real estate prices, Indians’ wealth has gone substantially in
the last decade, providing boost to domestic consumption though consumption
growth rates may come down in future
5.
Savings rate is high at around 30 per cent though it has come down in the last
three to four years (of course, the high savings rate is mainly due to the fact
that common people have no social security)
6.
India ’s
population is very young providing good demographic benefits in the form of
higher productivity and higher consumption of goods and services
7.
Poverty has declined substantially of late though we are plagued with malnutrition,
lack of potable water & sanitation, and illiteracy
8.
The level of entrepreneurship has gone up substantially after liberalization
9.
India
has vast natural resources, such as iron ore, coal, water and arable land
10.
India ’s
skills in export sectors – like, software services, engineering goods, gems
& jewellery and garments – are well recognized across the world
11.
If implemented properly, Goods and Services Tax (GST) will boost tax revenues
12.
India
has vast potential for tourism—be it medical, heritage or wildlife
The weaknesses are:
1.
Loss of confidence in India ’s
ability to fix the economic problems and lack of strong political leadership
2.
Falling Indian rupee is reflecting lack of economic reforms since 2004, though
the Government lowered subsidies on petrol and diesel to some extent
3.
Current account deficit has gone out of hand putting pressure on rupee
4.
Fiscal deficit is getting out of control as the government is unable to control
expenditure (huge subsidies on food, fuel and fertilisers) for about six years
5.
Consumer Price Inflation remains very high at around 8 to 10 per cent for about
five years, though wholesale price inflation is slightly on the mend
6.
Large price rise in food articles is affecting the poor people very adversely
7.
Retrospective tax amendments—for example, Vodafone tax dispute
8.
Indian bureaucrats are partially responsible for delayed actions on the ground
9.
Investors’ are concerned about controls on foreign capital outflows. In the
last three months, foreign investors have taken out approximately $12 billion
from Indian debt/equity markets, though many emerging markets have experienced
flight of foreign capital.
10.
India ’s
national income growth has slowed down due to high interest rates, decline in
investment cycle, lack of economic reforms and weak global outlook
11.
Indian corporates are burdened with high foreign as well as domestic debt
12.
Manufacturing sector is down due to: mining bans, delays in environmental
clearances, land acquisition problems, social unrest and others—the central
government is unable to address these problems despite tall and hollow talks
13.
There is massive skills deficit across industries
14.
The central government is unable to push economic reforms as it is drowned in
corruption scandals in the last three to four years. Unfortunately, corruption
has permeated the entire social fabric.
15. The
micro challenges for India
are: poor healthcare, lack of quality and basic education, malnutrition,
hunger, poverty and illiteracy
16. Hard
infrastructure (roads, ports, power, broadband, etc) is very weak and energy
security is poor. The present government has fully failed on this front.
17. Low
productivity is impeding farm output and the government has done precious
little except raising procurement prices for food grains
18. Focus
of the Congress (I)-led UPA Government on vote-catching welfare schemes
ignoring the ills of the economy completely
19. The
Indian Parliament is interested only in uproars, walkouts, and logjams
To Sum Up:
- - -
Disclaimer: The author is an investment analyst, equity investor and
freelance writer. This write-up is for information purposes only and should not
be taken as investment advice. Investors are advised to consult their financial
adviser before making any investment decisions. He blogs at:
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