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Can Pakistan learn from the mess Modi has created in India's economy

Economic reforms is what we elected modi for , he's delivering his promise. The economic slowdown is the reason is the reason most nation don't go through reforms .

GST is needed to attract big investments , better face economic slowdown now rather than in the future where it's even riskier.
 
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no job growth and GDP, if it wasn't for the new formula

what exactly is the change in formula again ? the formula has certainly changed but the method is not fraudulent and does not show fake numbers . Our data anyday is more reliable and credible that the data of pakistani agencies and it's stats

According to the author of the original article, it's not about just part of the picture but the whole picture that matters.
Its weird , 2 million , 3 million jobs have been lost , then who are buying these vehicles ? surely FAKE NEWS, maybe they forgot to put a negative sign infront of those numbers :tsk:
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Yashwant Sina, just like Shatugan Sinha, is showing his Bihari genes (political chameleon) in attacking his party because he is just salty that he wasn't given political appointments.

August Car sales

http://www.ibtimes.co.in/car-sales-...i-hyundai-tata-motors-others-performed-740493

August 2 wheeler sales

HMSI sales up 26.36% at 6,22180 units in August:

http://www.thehindubusinessline.com...636-at-622180-units-in-aug/article9840590.ece

Hero MotoCorp records highest ever monthly sales in August:

http://www.newindianexpress.com/bus...est-ever-monthly-sales-in-august-1651188.html

Royal Enfield's August sales up 22 per cent at 67977 units:

http://www.newindianexpress.com/bus...es-up-22-per-cent-at-67977-units-1651140.html

TVS Motor Company posts 16% sales growth in August 2017:

http://auto.economictimes.indiatime...posts-16-sales-growth-in-august-2017/60325508


India manufacturing sector bounces back from July’s contraction: PMI

http://www.hindustantimes.com/busin...raction-pmi/story-SZnTeyaK9XKxpM1mMnc6DM.html

:rap: Fake Data
 
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True, but the problems only began to surface in the their last FY (FY17). If the author is correct, then the GDP growth rate will not be 7.x % as being forecasted by the "WorldBank" because they have been very wrong with regards to India in recent years. Two years ago, India's growth was supposed to be 8.x in FY17, but it is closer to 5.x. And, if the author is correct about the aggregation of the problem of notebandi, GST, and stringiest regulation will weighed down all sectors of the economy. India is more likely to see GDP growth of 3.x-4.x and not 7.x.

Besides, @Joe Shearer shared his research: Out of 13 Million folks entering the job force every year, only 750,000 find regular employment. 8M do not find any jobs and the rest have temp or day to day jobs. The bottom of the sack keeps getting heavier and heavier. Moreover, Indians have a habit of being miserly and will stop spending what little they had gotten in the habit of spent. I see deflation and a quick drop to the bottom.

I was also fooled by his Gujrat reputation. But, Modiji only continued the effort and policies of his predecessor and didn't create a miracle in Gujrat as many in the Hindutva media fantasized. This time he has really done it. The snowball will only get bigger.

The problem with this short term thinking is that you can only see 2-3 years. The changes Modi made are aimed at creating growth story over a term of 10-20 years. Here are the ways :-

a. It will increase government coffers by bringing a lot of businesses under tax ambit -- something the author completely ignores. India has a dismally low tax revenue to GDP ratio. So is Pakistan btw AND it is one thing that Pakistan needs to learn.

b. It will bring the runaway prices of real estate under control. In India a HUGE amount of real estate is used to park black money and by introducing controls of property sales and holding, Modi government has completely halted the unstoppable rise of real estate prices. Meaning more youth can move and permanently stay in major business centers of India. Places like Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, Hyderabad and Pune has seen a slow down and reversal of massive price increase.

c. It will make India more competitive with regards to opening new businesses. Tax regime in India was such a mess that no one in India dares to start a new business to produce locally. You may be able to produce for your state but selling the same items in another state was a mess. It still is troublesome but much better. This was one of the reasons why after independence only few major Indian companies exists in the daily use items. Most are foreign companies. The other issue is India's extremely complicated labour laws which still needs tackling.

As far as your prediction of deflation and fall to bottom, I will only say that India is still GROWING at 6.5% +. I hardly see anything stopping it.
 
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It's like Tiger take one step back before taking long jump.

Modi decision will benefits India in mediam and long term.
 
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I waited for a while hoping Modi would be another Vajpayee who was a pleasant surprise. (Too bad we couldn't make a deal with him). But, it wasn't to be the case. Now he has been in power for over three years and we can better judge his performance despite the claims of a 56" chest by his diehard fans. It's not too early and not unfair now.

Modi's built a better foundation for India's future than Vajpayee did. But to fix 10 years of bad governance, he needed only 4 years or so to fix it. Yes, the economy has been fixed, now what we need to see is a recovery in the private industry, which will take anywhere between 1 year and 2 years.

Unlike during Vajpayee's time, where PV Narasimha Rao's governance helped him inherit a decent economy, this time Modi inherited two major problems, one was a collapsed private sector due to bad loans and if you recall, we also had 2 years of major drought as soon as Modi came to power.

1. the GDP formula change inflated
the GDP growth number by as much as 2% point (See the Al Jazeera report)
View attachment 431272

That's wrong. The new GDP formula only increased GDP by 0.5% compared to the Congress. Under the new formula, Congress delivered a growth of 6.7% in the last quarter after Modi came to power.

What made Modi's growth special was he maintained higher growth even with the collapse of the private sector due to NPAs as well as rural sector due to the drought.

Let's not forget FDI has doubled since Modi.

We see the manipulation of GDPs in the US as well. Politician playing with numbers to look good. Why such an obsession with one number? Votes?

There has been no manipulation of GDP.

Can you please tell me how many of these TVs you purchased since 2010?

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What's the point calculating this in the GDP then?

A recent CNN report has called this a "Jobless Growth" for India over the past 15 years.

Jobless growth started from 2011.

2. The trend in the last 4 quarters is down
and not stopping anytime soon. Both the World-bank and the IMF are still lowering forecast for the current FY18 after being in denial for over a year.

FY-17, Q2: 7.5
FY-17, Q3:7
FY-17, Q4: 6.1
FY-18, Q1: 5.7

FY17Q4 and FY18Q1 will obviously be low due to the double whammy of demonetization and GST. FY18Q2 will only see a mild recovery. So let's see what's next.

FY-18, Q2: 6%
FY-18, Q3: 7.3%
FY-18, Q4: 7.7%

New growth rates from RBI. Average = 6.7%

WB is even better. They say GDP will be 7% for FY-18.

That's what you call a trend. The 5.7 growth rate in the last reported quarter, could really be 4.7 or even 3.7 if Mr. Sinha, above, is correct.

It's not a trend. There was massive destocking in Q1. Nobody made anything and they only got rid of what they had already made at extremely cheap prices. Cars saw discounts of few thousands to a few lakhs.

http://www.news18.com/news/auto/top-car-discounts-for-june-2017-1431347.html

3. Youth dividend
has been turned on its head according to Sarkar's own numbers. In the same Al Jazeera report above:

India won't see 6% growth if jobs are lost. We would be much closer to 3% or less.

Fact: Rural wages have increased since demonetization.
http://www.business-standard.com/ar...ation-rises-to-7-3-nomura-117012700617_1.html

One has to wonder with so many mistakes if they weren't done by design? IE force people to leave the cash in the banks and use digital money for transactions. Gov't takes control of your money and you lose the right to pay cash for a legitimate transaction. Take away more of the freedoms.

Nobody lost any freedom financially. Those who had illegal earnings suffered. Good.

All the BJP ministers who have criticized Modi were all people who were sidelined by Modi. :D
So they simply took this chance to make people remember they exist.
The thing is they have given Modi an incredible weapon to turn against them when the economy recovers in Q3 and Q4.

http://www.livemint.com/Industry/OC...-who-predicted-India-GDP-growth-at-57-in.html
Meet the economist who predicted India GDP growth at 5.7% in Q1

However, in the medium-term we are still confident that India GDP growth will pick up quite rapidly to somewhere near 8% towards the October-December quarter. We are quite bullish on India in the medium- to longer-term.
 
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Indians chest thumping as usual when the whole world knows that Modi’s monetary policies are a disaster. Keep pretending that everything is fine.

It is funny how these Indian fools are so obsessed to always involve Pakistan into their mess.
Tell me three large economies ie 1 Trillion Dollars + nominally which are growing at 5%+ today and I will show you just how well the India is doing. Whole world knows how well Indian economy is doing. The changes done were long due and still labour law changes are pending. You don't make such major changes when economy is downunder but when it is stable.
 
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You are in the formal sector; you pay taxes, and you stick to government regulations.

The major labour oriented regulations can be listed quickly; the full list of compliances was over 50, may be smaller now, but not much smaller. These include, but are not restricted to:
  1. Minimum Wages Act;
  2. Employment of Labour (Standing Orders) Act;
  3. ESI;
  4. PF, PPF;
  5. Contract Labour Abolition Act (the most violated in practice);
  6. Gratuity;
  7. Bonus;
As I mentioned, there are about 50+ compliances to be met by an employer, more or less dependent on if the employment is more than 10 for enterprises using power, more than 20 for enterprises not using power; you fall under none of them being a lone individual.

Exactly. Formal employment is useless to me. Btw, I am not counted in formal employment.

Let's start with beauty parlours; as @jbgt90 will testify, I know a bit about these. Many beauty parlours in the suburbs of major Indian cities are single-woman operations and earn very small amounts. The three or four hired hands MAY earn/MAY be paid or may be told that they will remain unpaid in exchange for learning the skills (unless they have already got trained at Jawed Habib or some other training-friendly chain). Average wages are well below the Minimum Wages Act. A franchise costs between Rs. 15.0 L to Rs. 25.0 L, but to buy over an existing franchise may cost twice as much (at the levels of comfort and professional expertise that jbgt90 patronises; for the likes of me, those who get their haircuts at Ita-ly, sitting on an 'ita', the costs are, ahem, somewhat less. Even though I have more hair than jbgt90). As a result, most of these saloons upgraded to 'beauty parlours' are single-room, minimally equipped operations run by one woman.

That's fine. My aunt is one, she makes enough to feed herself and live comfortably. And she is not formally employed.

For your information, most of these loans are squandered on consumption. Precious little goes into productive purchase, or salaries and wages, or promotion, or any business-linked activity. That is why the 'informal' sector, the 'Mahajan' sector, still flourishes; that is why the poor pay twice, or thrice as much as the middle class, who, in turn, pay far more than the rich; currently, rates are at 2% or 2.5% per month, 24 to 30% a year, with a lock-in of one year, and the chances of making major losses, physically, in case of default.

That's fine innit? Entrepreneurs have the habit of picking themselves up after a loss. They will be tomorrows millionaires and billionaires.

Why don't you find out? The Indian employer is liable to pay these 'freelance' and 'contract workers' subject to deduction of tax at source; this is one reason for PAN and TAN for entities, there is supposed to be complete data on these workers, but there is actually no data. Instead of galumphing clumsily around this mine-field, with which as a party they are perfectly well aware, being supported throughout the country by the traders whom one matchless idiot has been attacking in every post, this government might have better tried to streamline the laws, and that might have led to less people dying of the consequences of such laws.

The only thing formal about these individuals is they pay taxes, like me. Nothing else.

It's not necessary that they are counted in formal employment just because they are tax payers.

Figure out where Mukesh Ambani's income is coming from, and how many TIMES more he earns than the next richest Indian.

That's not going to help India achieve such extremely high addition to the economy in just 3-4 years. We've added $600B to the economy.

India GDP:
2013 - 1.85T
2017 - 2.5T

We saw a slight recovery in the final year of UPA after they posted 6.9% growth(not 6.7%), and that has continued.

http://www.thehindu.com/business/Ec...es-201314-gdp-growth-to-69/article6839570.ece

We had jobless growth between 2011 and 2014, probably 2015. What we saw after that is the diversification of employment and creation of new sectors that has gone unnoticed by the govt and people at large. People adapted, and nobody has data on how this happened. In fact, this was when I lost faith in the formal sector and became self-employed, and many people have followed me in this. People like me who pay taxes are extremely few.

The problem is the govt can only take surveys based on sample rates. That gives a terrible picture of the system. There's no way the economy would have added 600B if the economy has only lost jobs over the last 6 years.

http://blog.payoneer.com/freelancers/industry-tips-fl/indias-freelance-economy-is-booming-in-2016/

If you notice, freelance picked up only after the high speed internet boom. Which means the 15M currently in this field, many have come up in the last few years. And these people are earning forex.

Even Uber and Ola drivers are earning well and are freelancers. Uber came to India in 2013 and they now have 400,000 drivers. So most of them have come up in Modi's time and obviously they are not part of govt data in formal employment. And they pay taxes as well, just like me.

I am not counted in formal employment even though I pay taxes. I am considered a business. It's because I don't pay taxes that employees pay, I pay taxes that businesses pay.

The govt simply has no data on the modern job market. As long as you're skilled enough, formal employment is a waste of time and energy. Rural employment is up because of govt schemes, for example, rural wages have been growing consistently, no chance of this happening if there were no jobs there. And urban employment has shifted to entrepreneurs and freelancers.
 
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Exactly. Formal employment is useless to me. Btw, I am not counted in formal employment.

You didn't read - accidentally, or deliberately. You are in the formal SECTOR, not in formal employment. There is a difference.

That's fine. My aunt is one, she makes enough to feed herself and live comfortably. And she is not formally employed.

Your point, that seems to have escaped your attention, is that each beauty parlour may be safely assumed to have three or four employees. That is incorrect; your own aunt's example shows that.

That's fine innit? Entrepreneurs have the habit of picking themselves up after a loss. They will be tomorrows millionaires and billionaires.

Are you completely out of touch with reality? These are marginal players, for whom there is no picking up possible after a loss. Millionaires and billionaires? You are thinking of Dhirubhai Ambani and his corporate history.

The only thing formal about these individuals is they pay taxes, like me. Nothing else.

And that is all that is needed. What else, unless you are employing people and breaking those laws?

It's not necessary that they are counted in formal employment just because they are tax payers.

For someone who states that he is making a living out of business knowledge, there seem to be a couple of largeish gaps in your understanding. There is a difference between the formal sector, that which is governed by a PAN card and which pays taxes, and formal employment, a reference to people who get their dues according to the laws of the land. The formal sector and formal employment overlap; they are hardly identical, as you seem to think.

That's not going to help India achieve such extremely high addition to the economy in just 3-4 years. We've added $600B to the economy.

India GDP:
2013 - 1.85T
2017 - 2.5T

We saw a slight recovery in the final year of UPA after they posted 6.9% growth(not 6.7%), and that has continued.

http://www.thehindu.com/business/Ec...es-201314-gdp-growth-to-69/article6839570.ece

The point is precisely that; the new political dispensation has done nothing different of any positive consequence. The steps they took have been disastrous, and will play out in the short term. By the time the economy recovers in the medium term, in three to five years, we will have lost enormous growth; figure out the consequences in terms of money invested, earning a steady compounded interest, and the same economy, the same system abruptly interrupted and struggling to find its feet and recover even its earlier state of health.

We had jobless growth between 2011 and 2014, probably 2015. What we saw after that is the diversification of employment and creation of new sectors that has gone unnoticed by the govt and people at large. People adapted, and nobody has data on how this happened. In fact, this was when I lost faith in the formal sector and became self-employed, and many people have followed me in this. People like me who pay taxes are extremely few.

I do not wish to be rude, but am being forced in the direction of extreme bluntness. Apparently you have never in your life studied economics. There is no amount of explosive growth due to what you call 'diversification of employment' and 'creation of new sectors' to have gone unnoticed by the government and by the people. All that happened, to be frank, is the outsourcing of some functions by institutions, or their outright loss of markets due to individuals breaking away and performing these functions at a lower cost, or the final consumers' discovery of direct dealing in these lines. When you offer financial services, you are shadowing the activity of banks and non-banking financial consultants; when you play the stock-market, you are dissolving the vulnerable fringes of stock-broking firms. When you offer on-line travel services, you are living off the decaying carcasses of ticket agents. In each of these, there is one common phenomenon: disintermediation. The extinction of the middleman and the replacement of this intermediation by direct activity over the net.

Paying taxes or not paying taxes can be divided into two groups: the less avoidable group, that is more or less left along because of the large numbers involved, is the group that finds itself paying income tax, but not paying other business taxes, corporate taxes, all the cesses and impositions that settle on a registered partnership firm or an incorporation. You can work out for yourself the volumes and significance of these fringe players who continue as individuals, usually because they have been forced out of formal employment. A great many of them make a virtue of necessity and justify their current anomalous situation on the grounds of having taking an entrepreneurial step. This is not the US; everyone and his dog can become an entrepreneur, but only a microscopic handful manage to scale up. Most remain marginal players, fringe elements.

The problem is the govt can only take surveys based on sample rates. That gives a terrible picture of the system. There's no way the economy would have added 600B if the economy has only lost jobs over the last 6 years.

http://blog.payoneer.com/freelancers/industry-tips-fl/indias-freelance-economy-is-booming-in-2016/

The government has very easy means of gathering data; by examining the records of existing tax payers, by identifying and hunting down deviants who haven't paid taxes, by making horrible examples of those not paying taxes. The government has so many skeletons in each minister's cupboard that it does not want to start something that it can't finish. Put very simply, any tough decision while in office, and while able to wrap oneself in political sanctity, remains to haunt people after they lose office and are subjected to the same enquiry as they blithely wished on others while they thought that they would hold office for ever.

If you notice, freelance picked up only after the high speed internet boom. Which means the 15M currently in this field, many have come up in the last few years. And these people are earning forex.

My, how interesting!

Thank you for this fascinating snippet. I was handling AT&T customer services on its call centre electronic exchanges in 1994-95 at 128 bits per second, handling data exchange through uucp. Most of the high-speed internet has been around for years; at higher prices, but they've been around. Please find some corner to stand and hand out this revolutionary message.

Even Uber and Ola drivers are earning well and are freelancers. Uber came to India in 2013 and they now have 400,000 drivers. So most of them have come up in Modi's time and obviously they are not part of govt data in formal employment. And they pay taxes as well, just like me.

Have you talked to any? The compensation has progressively dropped, and the targets are higher and higher. These drivers are in a debt trap, because they were encouraged to buy cabs on loans sponsored by Ola and Uber, and now find that they can't pay the EMIs AND earn the amount they were earning before. I am more and more incredulous of your contact with the real world.

I am not counted in formal employment even though I pay taxes. I am considered a business. It's because I don't pay taxes that employees pay, I pay taxes that businesses pay.

Sure. You don't have to be a self-employed person and still be in the informal sector. There are formal employees in the formal sector, there are informal (illegal) employees in the formal sector, and there are informal employees in the informal sector. A person who has no one but himself and runs a business without paying taxes in the informal sector is self-employed, as is a person who has no one but himself and runs a business but pays his business taxes. For your information, the employment statistics counts these examples. Study them, even casually, and you will find that out.

The govt simply has no data on the modern job market. As long as you're skilled enough, formal employment is a waste of time and energy. Rural employment is up because of govt schemes, for example, rural wages have been growing consistently, no chance of this happening if there were no jobs there. And urban employment has shifted to entrepreneurs and freelancers.

LOL.

Surprising how people get their skills out of the box! Formal employment is a necessary preliminary to freelancing, unless you are a gifted individual (like me :enjoy:). OK, I'm just being obnoxious, but I know about this 'skilled' sector pretty well. You can't scale up.

The government data on the modern job market, that you seem to imagine is springing up all around, is not needed; this self-employed skilled practitioner market is pitifully small and does nothing earth-shattering compared to the organised, the formal sector, and compared to the tax revenues of the formally employed.

Rural wages have grown for the very obvious reason - MNREGA. If it had not been there, the downward spiral of rural wages would have continued; once the 100 days of employment came in, there was always an option, and employers of rural labour found themselves forced to inch up rural wages.

Your urban employment shifting to freelancers and entrepreneurs still amounts to nothing more than the van loader who earns a daily wage. Between him and your mythical entrepreneur, there is nothing to choose.
 
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You didn't read - accidentally, or deliberately. You are in the formal SECTOR, not in formal employment. There is a difference.

That wasn't the point I was making. I meant I am not counted as a 'job created'.

Your point, that seems to have escaped your attention, is that each beauty parlour may be safely assumed to have three or four employees. That is incorrect; your own aunt's example shows that.

You missed the point. My aunt's business is very small and she has 4 employees. So how well do you think the more successful ones have fared?

Are you completely out of touch with reality? These are marginal players, for whom there is no picking up possible after a loss. Millionaires and billionaires? You are thinking of Dhirubhai Ambani and his corporate history.

Oh, so you don't believe in the rags to riches story? My family is filled with such stories.

A lot of people start with initial investment of less than 1L and have made business worth crores. Entrepreneurship is the only way to get rich. That's a fact.

There is always picking up after a loss. I have no backup and have suffered losses. I have a lot of debt, but I am comfortable with it even though the interest component itself is more than most people's salaries. If I was employed formally, it would have been insurmountable debt.

I doubt you have ever taken financial risks if you have such a negative attitude when it comes to dealing with money.

And that is all that is needed. What else, unless you are employing people and breaking those laws?

Dude, that's not counted as 'jobs created'. I think you have lost touch with the discussion. You have made the assumption that people are sitting with no work, I'm pointing out that people have setup their own businesses instead of being gainfully employed in a 9 to 5 job.

I am not counted as an employee in a formal sector. So as far as the govt is concerned my job is not a job, it's a business and hence the govt has not helped create my job.

For someone who states that he is making a living out of business knowledge, there seem to be a couple of largeish gaps in your understanding. There is a difference between the formal sector, that which is governed by a PAN card and which pays taxes, and formal employment, a reference to people who get their dues according to the laws of the land. The formal sector and formal employment overlap; they are hardly identical, as you seem to think.

Uber drivers are not formally employed.

And no, they don't overlap when it comes to govt statistics. And that's the problem.

The point is precisely that; the new political dispensation has done nothing different of any positive consequence. The steps they took have been disastrous, and will play out in the short term. By the time the economy recovers in the medium term, in three to five years, we will have lost enormous growth; figure out the consequences in terms of money invested, earning a steady compounded interest, and the same economy, the same system abruptly interrupted and struggling to find its feet and recover even its earlier state of health.

What if growth in Q4 this year is 7.7-8%. Does that qualify as recovery?

I do not wish to be rude, but am being forced in the direction of extreme bluntness. Apparently you have never in your life studied economics. There is no amount of explosive growth due to what you call 'diversification of employment' and 'creation of new sectors' to have gone unnoticed by the government and by the people. All that happened, to be frank, is the outsourcing of some functions by institutions, or their outright loss of markets due to individuals breaking away and performing these functions at a lower cost, or the final consumers' discovery of direct dealing in these lines. When you offer financial services, you are shadowing the activity of banks and non-banking financial consultants; when you play the stock-market, you are dissolving the vulnerable fringes of stock-broking firms. When you offer on-line travel services, you are living off the decaying carcasses of ticket agents. In each of these, there is one common phenomenon: disintermediation. The extinction of the middleman and the replacement of this intermediation by direct activity over the net.

What you have considered is a stagnant economy. That's not the case. The economy has not stagnated to the point where freelancers are stealing someone else's job.

Stockbroking firms have more business than ever and an individual playing in the stock market is adding to the revenue generated, he is not taking away someone else's business.

Similarly, those who are working as freelancers are making more money than if they were formally employed. Of course, these people are probably taking away the jobs of people from other countries, but that's good for us right.

Paying taxes or not paying taxes can be divided into two groups: the less avoidable group, that is more or less left along because of the large numbers involved, is the group that finds itself paying income tax, but not paying other business taxes, corporate taxes, all the cesses and impositions that settle on a registered partnership firm or an incorporation. You can work out for yourself the volumes and significance of these fringe players who continue as individuals, usually because they have been forced out of formal employment. A great many of them make a virtue of necessity and justify their current anomalous situation on the grounds of having taking an entrepreneurial step. This is not the US; everyone and his dog can become an entrepreneur, but only a microscopic handful manage to scale up. Most remain marginal players, fringe elements.

Completely wrong. The only people who can become freelancers are people who are damn good at their jobs. You can't be mediocre and a freelancer at the same time, nobody will give you work. You are given work based on the quality of work. That's also why you make many times more money than if you were employed.

So people who setup their own businesses are people who have some level of competence in the field they are working in.

As I pointed out, there are 15 million people in the international freelance business, and this market has come up only recently. But the problem is this is not counted as 'jobs created'. But the fact is these people are adding more to the economy than the formally employed because they are earning forex for the govt as well as consuming more than when they were formally employed.

Please understand, we are talking about jobs created by the govt and its influence in statistics. The jobs situation is not as dismal as you believe, especially when you have the ability to setup your own business and try to get a few years out of that.

The only people who suffer are the ones who are mediocre or worse. But there's no saving them anyway.

The government has very easy means of gathering data; by examining the records of existing tax payers, by identifying and hunting down deviants who haven't paid taxes, by making horrible examples of those not paying taxes. The government has so many skeletons in each minister's cupboard that it does not want to start something that it can't finish. Put very simply, any tough decision while in office, and while able to wrap oneself in political sanctity, remains to haunt people after they lose office and are subjected to the same enquiry as they blithely wished on others while they thought that they would hold office for ever.

All that's great. But most of us are earning forex. Forex = we can park it in safe havens and there's nobody to ask us about it. I can easily keep half my money in dollars or euros and then pay taxes only on money I have transferred and converted to INR. When you deal with forex, tax avoidance is quite easy. It's because the govt has not reached the level of maturity to make laws for, say, the Youtube business. How will the govt audit this stuff?

My, how interesting!

Thank you for this fascinating snippet. I was handling AT&T customer services on its call centre electronic exchanges in 1994-95 at 128 bits per second, handling data exchange through uucp. Most of the high-speed internet has been around for years; at higher prices, but they've been around. Please find some corner to stand and hand out this revolutionary message.

I don't think you understand. Freelance became big in India only in the last 5 years. It's primarily related to the growth of startup ecosystem in India. 50% of the freelancers in India are swallowed up by tech startups in India alone.

Not to mention, you need high speed internet because you need the ability to network through streaming via video conferences with your clients. 128 bits per second gives you jack all.

Take Coursera for example. You are streaming a live video of yourself. Do you think that's possible with a 128 bits line? Please be realistic. The internet ecosystem has changed only in the last few years.

Have you talked to any? The compensation has progressively dropped, and the targets are higher and higher. These drivers are in a debt trap, because they were encouraged to buy cabs on loans sponsored by Ola and Uber, and now find that they can't pay the EMIs AND earn the amount they were earning before. I am more and more incredulous of your contact with the real world.

Yes, I speak to them every day. They moved up from getting paid 10k-15k all the way to 40-50k a month. Huge, huge upgrade. The ones who got screwed were the ones who took too much debt and expected to earn up to 80K a month forever. I have in fact advised some of them on how to expand their business over the next 10 years on just 40-50k a month.

Why don't you speak to an Uber driver yourself, he will tell you in detail how Uber raised his standards of living drastically.

Sure. You don't have to be a self-employed person and still be in the informal sector. There are formal employees in the formal sector, there are informal (illegal) employees in the formal sector, and there are informal employees in the informal sector. A person who has no one but himself and runs a business without paying taxes in the informal sector is self-employed, as is a person who has no one but himself and runs a business but pays his business taxes. For your information, the employment statistics counts these examples. Study them, even casually, and you will find that out.

No they don't. I am not formally employed. I am not considered as a job created. Mainly because I work for foreign employers and they have no need to give any information to the Indian govt. And as far as the Indian Govt is concerned, I am a business, not an employee or someone who is part of the 'jobs created' statistics.

LOL.

Surprising how people get their skills out of the box! Formal employment is a necessary preliminary to freelancing, unless you are a gifted individual (like me :enjoy:). OK, I'm just being obnoxious, but I know about this 'skilled' sector pretty well. You can't scale up.

The government data on the modern job market, that you seem to imagine is springing up all around, is not needed; this self-employed skilled practitioner market is pitifully small and does nothing earth-shattering compared to the organised, the formal sector, and compared to the tax revenues of the formally employed.

:lol:

It is obvious that those who are formally employed will pay more taxes, but only for now. But it is the freelancers who have the biggest ability to scale up. The first big businesses that Indians will setup in the future will come from the freelancers and entrepreneurs. Naturally, these people have gained their experience from being formally employed previously, but that's how it all works anyway.

You get experience, you branch out, you setup new businesses and then one or many of them succeed. But the problem is the govt doesn't count it as 'jobs created', it's counted as new businesses.

The fact is after Modi came, the startup ecosystem has expanded beautifully. MUDRA has given loans to over 90 million people out of which 22 million are new businesses. That in itself is the biggest achievement of the govt in the field of employment.

I would suggest you read up on Startup India.

http://startupindia.gov.in/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Startup_India

http://www.financialexpress.com/ind...-3rd-largest-hub-for-new-tech-outfits/515330/

Rural wages have grown for the very obvious reason - MNREGA. If it had not been there, the downward spiral of rural wages would have continued; once the 100 days of employment came in, there was always an option, and employers of rural labour found themselves forced to inch up rural wages.

So what? I pointed that out long ago that MGNREGA is the reason why the govt has successfully saved the rural sector.

The quality of life in the rural area has increased under Modi after demonetization. That's the simple fact. Why else do you think Modi won big time in UP 5 months after demonetization.

Had the rural areas failed, do you think they would have voted for him? Get real.

Your urban employment shifting to freelancers and entrepreneurs still amounts to nothing more than the van loader who earns a daily wage. Between him and your mythical entrepreneur, there is nothing to choose.

Are you a socialist from commie land? Only socialists think this way.

Even if 1% of the startups a year succeed, you will one day get a $100B company in 50 years that will employ 500,000 people. You have no clue about the importance of an entrepreneur, especially in a country as large as India. Ever heard of Bill Gates or Steve Jobs? Who do you think they are? Did they start off with billion dollar companies from day one? Everybody starts small.

The difference between an employee and an entrepreneur is that even if they both start off as van loaders, one day the entrepreneur will buy the van while the employee will retire with a backache, probably after working for the entrepreneur. Which one would you rather be?

Your over-reliance on faulty statistics to present a dismal picture of an economy that has added $600B makes you look silly. You simply don't understand the importance of what Modi has done. All you want to see is some dumb growth figure without actually looking at the quality of that growth.[/quote]
 
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That wasn't the point I was making. I meant I am not counted as a 'job created'.

If you want to convey that, you might do better if you separate out formal sector and informal sector, from the completely different formal employment and informal employment.

You missed the point. My aunt's business is very small and she has 4 employees. So how well do you think the more successful ones have fared?

Tell you what. Since you seem to be an ivory tower specialist, why don't you walk into any Naturals or Green Originals or L'Oreal franchise and count for yourself? I have never seen more than four at any of these. Unless in your opinion, productivity is very high in Hyderabad, that should be a good enough sample size. In small ones, there's either one, the owner-sole technician, or two.

So how well do you expect the more successful ones have fared?

Oh, so you don't believe in the rags to riches story? My family is filled with such stories.

Sure. If you say so. Your family is obviously an exception, and I am obviously speaking to one of the Birlas. I still don't believe in the rags to riches story. I deal with finance on a daily basis, as a financial advisor. If there were so many, I'd be out of work.

There are lots of cumulative growth stories, where people have had generations of foundation building, and have only branched out on a significant scale in the present generation.

A lot of people start with initial investment of less than 1L and have made business worth crores. Entrepreneurship is the only way to get rich. That's a fact.

Among other things, I've had occasion to go to THub, to their board meetings. Where are these successful entrepreneurs hiding?

There is always picking up after a loss. I have no backup and have suffered losses. I have a lot of debt, but I am comfortable with it even though the interest component itself is more than most people's salaries. If I was employed formally, it would have been insurmountable debt.

You may be doing well enough to pay the interest and still making money enough to stay afloat, but most of the cases where I have had work have been cases where people were undercapitalised and rapidly found that they were sub-optimally sized and got into debt. My job in those cases is financial re-engineering.

I have exactly one client who has gone from rags to riches. He has made great progress, but now has Rs. 4 crores of property, and has a loan of Rs. 96 lakhs from a major bank, can't get more money although he has an expanding market, and can't release his property value, although he can get facilities of at least Rs. 2 crores if he was to be making a loan application today. He has additional farm land of Rs. 5 crores + and can't do anything with it because banks won't lend him money on agricultural land.

Are you talking about India?

I doubt you have ever taken financial risks if you have such a negative attitude when it comes to dealing with money.

As the new Rockefeller, you obviously know it all. I did rather badly; I promoted and ran my own software services company on my own from 1988 to 1995, in Bangalore, and employed between 10 to 15 programmers at any given point of time after 1990. Finally gave it up as I couldn't run it single-handed, and the industry was growing so fast that my kids were picked up after their first year or so with me at three to four times the salary I could afford.

After that, I've turned around, independent of each other, three companies that had been making losses continuously during their existence, and put them on a permanently profitable footing. Last I heard, each was doing reasonably well, with around 10 to 20% annual growth. Besides re-positioning these, which meant knowing a lot about the market and the competition, there was a lot of financial junk to be jettisoned. I had to deal with the accountants and the accounting systems, with auditors, internal and statutory, with the bankers, and, in one case, with the government body responsible for rehabilitating loss-making companies, all of whom wanted to hear how the turn-around would look like in financial terms.

But you must be right, and I know nothing about entrepreneurship or managing money.

Dude, that's not counted as 'jobs created'. I think you have lost touch with the discussion. You have made the assumption that people are sitting with no work, I'm pointing out that people have setup their own businesses instead of being gainfully employed in a 9 to 5 job.

Yes, I know a number of these. They are generally people at mid-management levels who got fired in the down-turn and are making a virtue out of necessity. Only one, a pair who have teamed up in Bangalore, one from software services, and one from property management, seem to be making money. That's what they claim, but there's little to show for it. I tried to get them to support an effort for training and services in the cyber security area, but while they had bright ideas, they really couldn't do much in terms of results.

For those who have set up their own businesses, they are still employees - this time of their own businesses that they've set up. You do know that in Company Law, a Managing Director continues to be an employee.

And don't worry too much about my not having exposure to entrepreneurship. When the IIMC network got together to welcome the Director, on his first visit to an alumni association, 80+ people turned up. At re-unions, generally over 50 turn up. We do get to hear some snippets from the world of business at these gatherings.

I am not counted as an employee in a formal sector. So as far as the govt is concerned my job is not a job, it's a business and hence the govt has not helped create my job.

You are beginning to fascinate me. This is the approach of the Class D employee in government organisations, who still thinks that government's function is to create a job, his job, rather than creating conditions where individuals, groups or organised entities - organisations - create jobs. Your entire point seems to be that a job is what this government is being measured on; it is not. It is the capability of enabling employment, not by itself, but by enabling others. The private sector, or the public sector.

Self-employment - the small trader, the transport operator, the loading and unloading staff, plumbers, electricians, carpenters, masons, welders, taxi drivers, bus operators, ferry boat operators, tea shop owners - has existed from time immemorial. The government - this or any other - has done nothing, and neither have earlier governments. I don't know about this boom in the number of people sitting at home, making money, sufficient to beat a job, paying taxes and getting wealthy; I can't see any, I haven't met any, I haven't heard of any, except from you.

Uber drivers are not formally employed.

We were talking of their making money, a lot of money, and that getting missed out. My point is that they are NOT making money. It's a predatory employer, or contractor, or aggregator, whatever you want to call them, both Uber and Ola, and this is not a stable market.

And no, they don't overlap when it comes to govt statistics. And that's the problem.

Nonsense. The formal sector, that pays taxes, either employs or doesn't employ people. Once it employs people, those people are in formal employment. Conversely, people who are formally employed have to be employed by the formal sector in corporate terms. How can you say that these don't overlap?

What if growth in Q4 this year is 7.7-8%. Does that qualify as recovery?

If the figure relates to the old indexing system, hugely so.

If it relates to the new one, it's a disaster.

What you have considered is a stagnant economy. That's not the case. The economy has not stagnated to the point where freelancers are stealing someone else's job.

Stockbroking firms have more business than ever and an individual playing in the stock market is adding to the revenue generated, he is not taking away someone else's business.

Similarly, those who are working as freelancers are making more money than if they were formally employed. Of course, these people are probably taking away the jobs of people from other countries, but that's good for us right.

It applies to stockbroking firms because the stock market is in a bull run, and that, in secular terms, is expected to be the trend at least until 2020. It does not apply to all other sectors.

Completely wrong. The only people who can become freelancers are people who are damn good at their jobs. You can't be mediocre and a freelancer at the same time, nobody will give you work. You are given work based on the quality of work. That's also why you make many times more money than if you were employed.

Ho, hum.

Sure, if you say so. And this phenomenon is not known to anybody but yourself, because it doesn't show up in the government statistics.

Right. This is not the black economy, this is the mirror economy.

So people who setup their own businesses are people who have some level of competence in the field they are working in.

As I pointed out, there are 15 million people in the international freelance business, and this market has come up only recently. But the problem is this is not counted as 'jobs created'. But the fact is these people are adding more to the economy than the formally employed because they are earning forex for the govt as well as consuming more than when they were formally employed.

There are 15 million people in the international freelance business in India? Really? Sounds very very good. Now, if they don't show up in government statistics, where did this figure come from?

Please understand, we are talking about jobs created by the govt and its influence in statistics. The jobs situation is not as dismal as you believe, especially when you have the ability to setup your own business and try to get a few years out of that.

I am thunderstruck that that is what I have been doing myself, and that I don't see very many others doing something like that.

The only people who suffer are the ones who are mediocre or worse. But there's no saving them anyway.

3,000 management schools. Less than 300 of them placing their students at more than Rs. 25,000 a month at the outset. The top 6 or 8 IIMs get an average of Rs. 17 lakhs pa for their students; the next, even with the IIM cachet, average Rs. 12 lakhs pa.

In my experience as a teacher, at B School, about 70% are mediocre. The rest are snapped up by industry, and work for between 5 to 15 years before thinking of doing their own thing. No one has tracked these, but you seem to have copious statistics about them.

All that's great. But most of us* are earning forex. Forex = we can park it in safe havens and there's nobody to ask us about it. I can easily keep half my money in dollars or euros and then pay taxes only on money I have transferred and converted to INR. When you deal with forex, tax avoidance is quite easy. It's because the govt has not reached the level of maturity to make laws for, say, the Youtube business. How will the govt audit this stuff?

Right, so the state forex reserves are going through the roof, and you also have yourselves built up forex reserves in addition. Sounds like most of the loose foreign exchange in the world is making a beeline here. How do the other markets survive?

* Who is the 'us'? How do you know? Not reflected in government statistics; what happens? you have an association? You are the Cosa Nostra? The way you sling around statistics, it seems that there is a parallel government going on, and a parallel set of industry bodies, a shadow NASSCOM, a shadow CII, a shadow ASSOCHAM, a shadow FICCI. Fascinating. Such a complete grip on statistics, and the government has no clue.

I don't think you understand. Freelance became big in India only in the last 5 years. It's primarily related to the growth of startup ecosystem in India. 50% of the freelancers in India are swallowed up by tech startups in India alone.

Not to mention, you need high speed internet because you need the ability to network through streaming via video conferences with your clients. 128 bits per second gives you jack all.

Take Coursera for example. You are streaming a live video of yourself. Do you think that's possible with a 128 bits line? Please be realistic. The internet ecosystem has changed only in the last few years.

The point I was making was to thank you for telling your grandmother how to suck eggs. I never said anywhere that that was the speed today, or that instead of video codecs, we could use uucp. I was making the point that I've been watching from the 1990s. You were in school then, from your descriptions. Taking all the technical advance into consideration, where the growth is coming from is difficult to see.

At one point, you say that freelancers/entrepreneurs make pots of money; that is the new way, not dull, old 9 to 5 office jobs. You then go on to say that most freelancers are snapped up by start-ups. So great; so this is a solid base for growth? Have you seen the valuations? Do you remember the Dotcom boom and the valuations then? And this is what you are pushing as the new Indian economic miracle?

Yes, I speak to them every day. They moved up from getting paid 10k-15k all the way to 40-50k a month. Huge, huge upgrade. The ones who got screwed were the ones who took too much debt and expected to earn up to 80K a month forever. I have in fact advised some of them on how to expand their business over the next 10 years on just 40-50k a month.

Why don't you speak to an Uber driver yourself, he will tell you in detail how Uber raised his standards of living drastically.

I speak to them daily. Not occasionally. I haven't met one, in the last six months, that isn't struggling. Neither they nor Ola. I don't know where your examples are coming from, but they are flatly contradictory to my own experience. I'm not calling you a liar, mind you; that would be grossly impolite.

No they don't. I am not formally employed. I am not considered as a job created. Mainly because I work for foreign employers and they have no need to give any information to the Indian govt. And as far as the Indian Govt is concerned, I am a business, not an employee or someone who is part of the 'jobs created' statistics.

You pay taxes, don't you? The government doesn't need to worry about those paying taxes. It needs to worry about those not paying taxes, who also happen not to be employed. So you earn huge money, how does that help the millions who would so dearly love to pay taxes, but can't get three square meals a day?

Where are the jobs? Or, if that word offends you so greatly, where is the employment?

When I work on skills development, I am not working as a placement agency, trying to get those kids jobs. It helps if I know people, but what is core is to teach them saleable skills.

You'd be surprised how few of them can work through video conferences with foreign clients.

It is obvious that those who are formally employed will pay more taxes, but only for now. But it is the freelancers who have the biggest ability to scale up. The first big businesses that Indians will setup in the future will come from the freelancers and entrepreneurs. Naturally, these people have gained their experience from being formally employed previously, but that's how it all works anyway.

We are talking here and now, and what you want us to do is wait for us to get over the shocks to the economy and wait for the promised land to come. We are to wait for these Godzilla set ups, by freelancers and entrepreneurs, who have been employed before, in a formal sector whose growth is shrinking.

You get experience, you branch out, you setup new businesses and then one or many of them succeed. But the problem is the govt doesn't count it as 'jobs created', it's counted as new businesses.

The fact is after Modi came, the startup ecosystem has expanded beautifully. MUDRA has given loans to over 90 million people out of which 22 million are new businesses. That in itself is the biggest achievement of the govt in the field of employment.

Bullshit. You just said it yourself. 68 millions are NOT for new businesses. And you feel that is the kind of conversion ratio that will build a huge business complex in India in future?


Sure.

While I pick my myopic way through them, and learn what I have been missing, why don't you return the favour? Go out and talk to people; not your self-referential way, where all you can see is yourself reflected a thousand million times, but to management guys, who are struggling to cope with the twin shocks; with employees, who have lost jobs, or expect to lose jobs, or have friends who have lost jobs; with service providers, who have found the going increasingly difficult with the shrinkage of working capital, and with increasing dues, because their buyers can't pay (Vodafone owes the cyber security consultants I talked about elsewhere around Rs. 68 lakhs; the firm has factored its receivables - these were gold-plated, right? - to the hilt and is now paying penalties because of delays; employees had not received salaries on time earlier, at present they are two months in arrears - there you go, another set of freelancers in the making). Or talk to Uber drivers or Ola drivers, currently earning between 25,000 to 40,000 a month, and unable to cope, unable to balance their EMI payments and their consumption needs; or small artisans and technicians, who can get work, but can't get payment, and are forced to compete with more and more flooding into the marketplace, no, not for jobs but for work. I could go on and on, and I haven't come to the rural market yet.

So what? I pointed that out long ago that MGNREGA is the reason why the govt has successfully saved the rural sector.

The quality of life in the rural area has increased under Modi after demonetization. That's the simple fact. Why else do you think Modi won big time in UP 5 months after demonetization.

The quality of life in the rural areas is dismal. Earlier people got paid, in cash; now things have got back to near normal, but there is no improvement. Far from it. Your rosy picture really needs special glasses; the crops are withering in the fields in north India, as any damn fool can tell you, if you had looked up from the monitor screen and asked, and I am telling you that in a satisfactory rainfall state, things are grim.

I don't know how long you will go on thinking that what happens, apparently, reportedly, to one individual represents the picture for the country as a whole. And I wonder about an analysis that depends on saying, 'He won, didn't he? How could he win if things hadn't really been great!'

Had the rural areas failed, do you think they would have voted for him? Get real.

And there you go.

What happened to the people of UP under the Yadavs doesn't matter. Decades of misrule and the faint hope that this time, things MIGHT change doesn't matter. According to you, the voters of UP looked at the $600 bn that's been added, looked at freelancers flourishing (never mind their - temporary - debts) and the vast opportunities opening up due to fast Internet and video conferencing possibilities, and voted for the BJP.

Makes sense. To the right type of mind.

Are you a socialist from commie land? Only socialists think this way.

About time; I was getting worried.

Every time a bhakt can't find an argument, he finds a commie, a socialist (the two are interchangeable in his fairly rudimentary political vocabulary); what took you so long?

Even if 1% of the startups a year succeed, you will one day get a $100B company in 50 years that will employ 500,000 people. You have no clue about the importance of an entrepreneur, especially in a country as large as India. Ever heard of Bill Gates or Steve Jobs? Who do you think they are? Did they start off with billion dollar companies from day one? Everybody starts small.

Bill Gates? Steve Jobs?

No.

Who were they?

The difference between an employee and an entrepreneur is that even if they both start off as van loaders, one day the entrepreneur will buy the van while the employee will retire with a backache, probably after working for the entrepreneur. Which one would you rather be?

Your over-reliance on faulty statistics to present a dismal picture of an economy that has added $600B makes you look silly. You simply don't understand the importance of what Modi has done. All you want to see is some dumb growth figure without actually looking at the quality of that growth.
 
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If you want to convey that, you might do better if you separate out formal sector and informal sector, from the completely different formal employment and informal employment.

Call it what you want, the govt doesn't have figures for some of the relevant stuff.

They need to make the definitions better with labour reforms.

Tell you what. Since you seem to be an ivory tower specialist, why don't you walk into any Naturals or Green Originals or L'Oreal franchise and count for yourself? I have never seen more than four at any of these. Unless in your opinion, productivity is very high in Hyderabad, that should be a good enough sample size. In small ones, there's either one, the owner-sole technician, or two.

So how well do you expect the more successful ones have fared?

Think logically. Even if we go by your figures, a single Mudra loan has given employment to at least 1 or 2 people at the very minimum.

Sure. If you say so. Your family is obviously an exception, and I am obviously speaking to one of the Birlas. I still don't believe in the rags to riches story. I deal with finance on a daily basis, as a financial advisor. If there were so many, I'd be out of work.

There are lots of cumulative growth stories, where people have had generations of foundation building, and have only branched out on a significant scale in the present generation.

India's education system doesn't allow the development of job creators, we make factory slaves in our schools. Their only objective is to get a good job and retire with good benefits. They don't think beyond real estate and gold. The problem is you are stuck with these people, I am not.

Among other things, I've had occasion to go to THub, to their board meetings. Where are these successful entrepreneurs hiding?

T-Hub is a place for small entrepreneurs. Once they get big, they move out. So you won't find successful ones there. Once you become successful, you graduate out of there.

You may be doing well enough to pay the interest and still making money enough to stay afloat, but most of the cases where I have had work have been cases where people were undercapitalised and rapidly found that they were sub-optimally sized and got into debt. My job in those cases is financial re-engineering.

Yup. So some are successful and some are not. Eventually, I will expand and create jobs. Maybe not, depends on what I'm gonna do next.

I have exactly one client who has gone from rags to riches. He has made great progress, but now has Rs. 4 crores of property, and has a loan of Rs. 96 lakhs from a major bank, can't get more money although he has an expanding market, and can't release his property value, although he can get facilities of at least Rs. 2 crores if he was to be making a loan application today. He has additional farm land of Rs. 5 crores + and can't do anything with it because banks won't lend him money on agricultural land.

Are you talking about India?

Yup. You got stuck with someone dealing in real estate from the looks of it. That's a 1 trick pony. If I had that much money, it would be an entirely different starting point for me. I don't care about real estate.

You are beginning to fascinate me. This is the approach of the Class D employee in government organisations, who still thinks that government's function is to create a job, his job, rather than creating conditions where individuals, groups or organised entities - organisations - create jobs. Your entire point seems to be that a job is what this government is being measured on; it is not. It is the capability of enabling employment, not by itself, but by enabling others. The private sector, or the public sector.

Now you are getting my point. This is what I am arguing about. This govt has created employment opportunities in a completely different way from past govts. They have provided financing to entities and businesses the govt and banks know very little about. A huge chunk of it has happened through personal loans. Many through MUDRA loans.

The problem for you is you have contacts (from IIM-C or elsewhere) that are most likely within the formal sector with a lot of experience. You haven't seen movement at a much lower scale than that. As I said, a beauty parlour. Even if it employs one person, it has created a job, but it is not within the ambit of govt survey.

Self-employment - the small trader, the transport operator, the loading and unloading staff, plumbers, electricians, carpenters, masons, welders, taxi drivers, bus operators, ferry boat operators, tea shop owners - has existed from time immemorial. The government - this or any other - has done nothing, and neither have earlier governments. I don't know about this boom in the number of people sitting at home, making money, sufficient to beat a job, paying taxes and getting wealthy; I can't see any, I haven't met any, I haven't heard of any, except from you.

Um... 15+ million known freelancers? Second highest in the world?

We were talking of their making money, a lot of money, and that getting missed out. My point is that they are NOT making money. It's a predatory employer, or contractor, or aggregator, whatever you want to call them, both Uber and Ola, and this is not a stable market.

No self-employment is stable. But the fact is an Uber driver gets paid 3 times that of a regular driver. I've met many drivers who are hired by car owners and they split the profits 50-50 and they claim to make more than if they had worked as a regular driver. It's easy to spot them, their faces don't match their profile photos.

Nonsense. The formal sector, that pays taxes, either employs or doesn't employ people. Once it employs people, those people are in formal employment. Conversely, people who are formally employed have to be employed by the formal sector in corporate terms. How can you say that these don't overlap?

Simply because govt statistics and what's on the ground don't match.

Self-employment is not formal employment. And that's a big problem. That's why labour reforms are necessary.

If the figure relates to the old indexing system, hugely so.

If it relates to the new one, it's a disaster.

Nope. The old methodology is passe. It put too much emphasis on old sectors, some obsolete sectors as well. It has no relevance to us anymore.

You may not believe it, but this govt has been creating jobs. It is not a jobless growth. But your over-reliance on the govt's statistics is what's holding you back.

This article is talking about there being job creation.
http://www.businesstoday.in/opinion...e-job-cuts-really-happening/story/253668.html
The reason why India can't say for sure how many jobs it created-or shed-is because the comprehensive, reliable data doesn't exist anywhere. The Labour Bureau covers only 8 sectors. Last year it claimed 1.38 lakh new jobs were created in those 8 sectors. In contrast, just the ministry of skill development claimed it placed nearly 6.5 lakh last year. This is just one case of how one arm of the government doesn't know what the other is doing. Interestingly, the Labour Bureau doesn't cover the two sectors-e-commerce/e-tail and logistics/warehousing-which have created the most jobs in the past 4-5 years.

You are stuck in those 8 sectors.

Take e-commerce for example. Flipkart and Amazon themselves must have created so many jobs, not just Uber and Ola. The problem is this is not counted in the labour statistics. The old methodology doesn't count it either. Meaning it is not part of the GDP figure. How else do you think these companies have become billion dollar companies in India in a span of only a few years?

There is nothing wrong with the way GDP is calculated. The other sectors need to fix their NPA burden and pick themselves up again.

It applies to stockbroking firms because the stock market is in a bull run, and that, in secular terms, is expected to be the trend at least until 2020. It does not apply to all other sectors.

It depends. Some sectors are going down, like IT. So it's obvious some jobs transferred to freelancers and contractors will eat away the job of an employee, but that's not the case with all sectors.

Ho, hum.

Sure, if you say so. And this phenomenon is not known to anybody but yourself, because it doesn't show up in the government statistics.

Right. This is not the black economy, this is the mirror economy.

It is not known to people who have been depending solely on govt figures.

There are 15 million people in the international freelance business in India? Really? Sounds very very good. Now, if they don't show up in government statistics, where did this figure come from?

From the number of unique account holders of Paypal, Payoneer, Skrill etc. Someone from Truelancer has collated sample information from these companies and released them. GoI can't get these figures from them because most of them are not based in India and have no reason to give them these figures. Why will the govt rely on figures nobody can vouch for?

If the govt had known about everything then we wouldn't have an informal sector. :D

Most of the freelance system has come up in India due to the startup ecosystem. And since the govt doesn't expect information from startups, the startups have no reason to waste time and money providing such info to the govt. Of course, many freelancers will work for multiple startups, so the information will be wrong anyway.

Fact: The govt has never approached me to explain how I am earning my dough.

I am thunderstruck that that is what I have been doing myself, and that I don't see very many others doing something like that.

Your sarcasm is noted. But so is your ignorance.

3,000 management schools. Less than 300 of them placing their students at more than Rs. 25,000 a month at the outset. The top 6 or 8 IIMs get an average of Rs. 17 lakhs pa for their students; the next, even with the IIM cachet, average Rs. 12 lakhs pa.

In my experience as a teacher, at B School, about 70% are mediocre. The rest are snapped up by industry, and work for between 5 to 15 years before thinking of doing their own thing. No one has tracked these, but you seem to have copious statistics about them.

Wow. I think you do not know where the argument is going. Make up your mind please. If the govt doesn't know what the students of its own school are doing then what about the millions who graduate outside govt owned schools?

I actually find it funny that you find IIM students mediocre. Maybe within that pool they are, but outside that tiny little pool they are good enough to be able to setup their own businesses. Naturally, many get jobs outside campus recruitment.

Hell, you might find some of your students in Coursera. :D

Right, so the state forex reserves are going through the roof, and you also have yourselves built up forex reserves in addition. Sounds like most of the loose foreign exchange in the world is making a beeline here. How do the other markets survive?

They have enough to pay us and survive themselves. What's the difference between outsourcing to an established business and a freelancer? There are a lot of startups around the world, over 50000 in the US alone who need cheap workers simply because they can't afford permanent employees. And they get those in India.

* Who is the 'us'? How do you know? Not reflected in government statistics; what happens? you have an association? You are the Cosa Nostra? The way you sling around statistics, it seems that there is a parallel government going on, and a parallel set of industry bodies, a shadow NASSCOM, a shadow CII, a shadow ASSOCHAM, a shadow FICCI. Fascinating. Such a complete grip on statistics, and the government has no clue.

They are the 15+ million unknown faces the govt has very little idea about.

Yup, govt has no clue. Yup, there is a hotch-potch of pseudo-NASSCOMs, CIIs etc who do a terrible job and get unreliable statistics.

The US has a proper union and everything, we don't.

https://benrmatthews.com/freelance-statistics/

This article should give you a clue.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/tech/...eer-options/story-1kHKXGcYpUiEMgyTYT9nNO.html

Welcome to high skilled informal employment.

The point I was making was to thank you for telling your grandmother how to suck eggs. I never said anywhere that that was the speed today, or that instead of video codecs, we could use uucp. I was making the point that I've been watching from the 1990s. You were in school then, from your descriptions. Taking all the technical advance into consideration, where the growth is coming from is difficult to see.

Exactly. We don't know how many international freelance jobs were created. We don't know how many national freelance jobs were created. We have no clue about the size of the retail industry. We have no clue about the size of the hospitality industry. And so on.

But the fact is we have added 600B to the economy in less than 4 years and this cannot happen without a net surplus in job creation. I think this is common sense. Pray tell me when was the last time India added 600B in 4 years? Especially with the so-called "jobless growth".

At one point, you say that freelancers/entrepreneurs make pots of money; that is the new way, not dull, old 9 to 5 office jobs. You then go on to say that most freelancers are snapped up by start-ups. So great; so this is a solid base for growth? Have you seen the valuations? Do you remember the Dotcom boom and the valuations then? And this is what you are pushing as the new Indian economic miracle?

As I said, self-employment is not guaranteed. Even if startups fail, there will be another that takes its place. This juggernaut has begun. You could be working for one company one day and another the next. Btw, freelancers choose the companies they work for, not the other way round.

Yes, startups will be our new economic miracle. As it has been for all developed countries.

I speak to them daily. Not occasionally. I haven't met one, in the last six months, that isn't struggling. Neither they nor Ola. I don't know where your examples are coming from, but they are flatly contradictory to my own experience. I'm not calling you a liar, mind you; that would be grossly impolite.

:lol:

The only ones who are struggling are the ones who are not working.

The pay from freelance work, including Ola and Uber, depends on how much they work. Nothing else.

If you don't work, you don't get paid, you struggle.

Have you ever asked them straight to their face how much they earn? I have and they are honest about it. They all say 40-50k. You think 40-50k a month is a small sum?

If they are not gonna tell you their income, then I'll give you another question for you to ask them. Ask them if they will leave Ola or Uber for regular driver jobs. :lol: They will say they won't. It's really rare but I have asked them this and they say only if another job pays more. :lol:

Now, if they can't manage money, that's a different story.

You pay taxes, don't you? The government doesn't need to worry about those paying taxes. It needs to worry about those not paying taxes, who also happen not to be employed. So you earn huge money, how does that help the millions who would so dearly love to pay taxes, but can't get three square meals a day?

My money goes into paying for MGNREGA employees. It funds the Food Security Bill. Saving the people is not my responsibility, I only have to pay taxes and get the govt to do the groundwork.

Where are the jobs? Or, if that word offends you so greatly, where is the employment?

Dude, what are you teaching our students in the IIMs? Are you telling them you can have wages rising and unemployment together for unskilled jobs?

When I work on skills development, I am not working as a placement agency, trying to get those kids jobs. It helps if I know people, but what is core is to teach them saleable skills.

You'd be surprised how few of them can work through video conferences with foreign clients.

Yeah, they need to learn English in schools first. I believe English and mathematics are the two most important skills you will learn in the Indian school of education. English broadens your horizon while math teaches you to think. Everything else is a waste of time which you can learn on your own if you know English and math.

We are talking here and now, and what you want us to do is wait for us to get over the shocks to the economy and wait for the promised land to come. We are to wait for these Godzilla set ups, by freelancers and entrepreneurs, who have been employed before, in a formal sector whose growth is shrinking.

What is more important is less regulatory hurdles and more financing. The Modi govt has provided both.

Bullshit. You just said it yourself. 68 millions are NOT for new businesses. And you feel that is the kind of conversion ratio that will build a huge business complex in India in future?

Which world are you living in? Modi has been there only since 2014. He initiated major reforms between then and 2015 and those took effect in 2016. So from 2014 to 2017, we have seen the addition of 22 million new businesses and financing for 68 million old businesses.

The 68 million old businesses may or may not have added employees, but the 22 million new businesses definitely have. If these 22 million businesses have added even 1 asset (employee) to the work force, then that's 22 million new jobs created. If they added 2 on average, it's 44 million.

I don't know which world you are living in, but the creation of employment for 22 to 44 million people in less than 3 years is a very, very, very, very, very, very, very big deal.

And this is only for MUDRA from new businesses, not from old, let alone from other sources of employment, forget the ones which the govt has no data about. So many others will have done the same with personal loans (my friend), credit cards (me), formal business loans (another friend) etc. There was a time I was paying 36% interest on about 6L I borrowed from a money lender and a few more from credit cards at 40%. I needed money very quickly and couldn't wait for a bank. So there are alternate albeit expensive forms of financing as well.

Sure.

While I pick my myopic way through them, and learn what I have been missing, why don't you return the favour? Go out and talk to people; not your self-referential way, where all you can see is yourself reflected a thousand million times, but to management guys, who are struggling to cope with the twin shocks; with employees, who have lost jobs, or expect to lose jobs, or have friends who have lost jobs; with service providers, who have found the going increasingly difficult with the shrinkage of working capital, and with increasing dues, because their buyers can't pay (Vodafone owes the cyber security consultants I talked about elsewhere around Rs. 68 lakhs; the firm has factored its receivables - these were gold-plated, right? - to the hilt and is now paying penalties because of delays; employees had not received salaries on time earlier, at present they are two months in arrears - there you go, another set of freelancers in the making). Or talk to Uber drivers or Ola drivers, currently earning between 25,000 to 40,000 a month, and unable to cope, unable to balance their EMI payments and their consumption needs; or small artisans and technicians, who can get work, but can't get payment, and are forced to compete with more and more flooding into the marketplace, no, not for jobs but for work. I could go on and on, and I haven't come to the rural market yet.

People lose their jobs every day. Nothing new about it. This is not a Modi-phenomenon. It's been happening from time immemorial.

Or talk to Uber drivers or Ola drivers, currently earning between 25,000 to 40,000 a month, and unable to cope, unable to balance their EMI payments and their consumption needs

Compared to what? The crappy lives they led earning 5k or 10k a month?

Some of them are struggling because they don't know how to manage their money.

You speak as though people are not allowed to muddle through tough times.

The quality of life in the rural areas is dismal. Earlier people got paid, in cash; now things have got back to near normal, but there is no improvement. Far from it. Your rosy picture really needs special glasses; the crops are withering in the fields in north India, as any damn fool can tell you, if you had looked up from the monitor screen and asked, and I am telling you that in a satisfactory rainfall state, things are grim.

:lol:

Is drought Modi's fault too? I wonder why the wages are rising then. Maybe the people from UP voted for Modi because they think he can speak to Lord Indra for rains.

I don't know how long you will go on thinking that what happens, apparently, reportedly, to one individual represents the picture for the country as a whole. And I wonder about an analysis that depends on saying, 'He won, didn't he? How could he win if things hadn't really been great!'

Yes. That's an extremely important indicator of success, poll results. You don't get landslide victory for screwing up.

He won because of two reasons. Central govt funded jobs, food and subsidies that actually reached the intended recipients through Aadhaar. And very, very good advertisement.

And there you go.

What happened to the people of UP under the Yadavs doesn't matter. Decades of misrule and the faint hope that this time, things MIGHT change doesn't matter. According to you, the voters of UP looked at the $600 bn that's been added, looked at freelancers flourishing (never mind their - temporary - debts) and the vast opportunities opening up due to fast Internet and video conferencing possibilities, and voted for the BJP.

Makes sense. To the right type of mind.

Sure. The other leaders 'suck'. Nothing special about it. But... wages are rising.

Let's ignore facts like rising wages and better food security and subsidies and use lame arguments that would never stand up in court.

About time; I was getting worried.

Every time a bhakt can't find an argument, he finds a commie, a socialist (the two are interchangeable in his fairly rudimentary political vocabulary); what took you so long?

I ain't no bhakt. Far from it. I had hopes for the old leaders coming back, like Yashwant Sinha, Jaswant Singh and Arun Shourie. But I was surprised with the new lineup.

But I see Modi doing a very good job. Why? Because I know jobs have been created. And I know an economy like India can't add 600B to the economy without new jobs.

I find a lot of confidence having the country being led by the BJP for two reasons: They are doing a good job and they are hyper-nationalists. That's it.

When was the last time you saw these figures?
Formal jobs created: 15 million (most likely far more than that once labour reforms are made)
GDP growth rate: 6.5-7% (and climbing)
Exchange rate: Stable
Fiscal deficit: 3.2% (and falling)
Inflation: <4%
Forex: $400B+ (and climbing, helped some by yours truly :D)
CAD: <2.5%
FDI: $70B+ (and climbing)

But am I right when I called you out? Your arguments reek of servitude, typical of socialists. Do you tell your students to go find a safe job and live the rest of their lives working for someone else?

I can imagine what you say. "Ooh, don't start your own companies and stuff. I will tell you sob stories about all the losers I have met who failed and are struggling and why you will be one too. I hope you all work for someone else the rest of your lives. Life sucks. Be depressed. Cheerio."

Bill Gates? Steve Jobs?

No.

Who were they?

Young startup entrepreneurs in the 70s working in a system that you ridiculed.
 
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@PDFChamp

It's not so gloomy...in fact in real world terms, it's not really gloomy.

Come up with a 2 trillion plus economy that's growing over 5% other than India and China.

Ground realities are consumer markets are growing by 13%. car sales have increased by around 9%, online sales have grown insanely. Every sector is growing.

The issue most are crying about is not the growth...but the absence of phenomenal growth. The steps taken are futuristic in nature and regulating how business is done and reforming the tax structure are signs of maturity in the economy.
 
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@PDFChamp

It's not so gloomy...in fact in real world terms, it's not really gloomy.

Come up with a 2 trillion plus economy that's growing over 5% other than India and China.

Ground realities are consumer markets are growing by 13%. car sales have increased by around 9%, online sales have grown insanely. Every sector is growing.

The issue most are crying about is not the growth...but the absence of phenomenal growth. The steps taken are futuristic in nature and regulating how business is done and reforming the tax structure are signs of maturity in the economy.

What's gone bad is private investment. Blame crony capitalism under UPA. Scams were not enough, they had to ruin the economy as well.

We can't see double digit growth and recovery in formal private employment until investment increases in the private sector. And this may take at least 1 year.
 
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Modi's built a better foundation for India's future than Vajpayee did. But to fix 10 years of bad governance, he needed only 4 years or so to fix it. Yes, the economy has been fixed, now what we need to see is a recovery in the private industry, which will take anywhere between 1 year and 2 years.

There has been no manipulation of GDP.

Can you please tell me how many of these TVs you purchased since 2010?

e031f33d8de0b6ea5d5e921b157ee55e--crt-tv-monster.jpg




FY17Q4 and FY18Q1 will obviously be low due to the double whammy of demonetization and GST. FY18Q2 will only see a mild recovery. So let's see what's next.

FY-18, Q2: 6%
FY-18, Q3: 7.3%
FY-18, Q4: 7.7%

New growth rates from RBI. Average = 6.7%

WB is even better. They say GDP will be 7% for FY-18.

#1: GDP manipulation: They only tell you part of the changes to cover their footprints. If you look at serious studies of the formula changes in the GDP done by classical economists you will see what else is being counted as "production" but it should be subtracted if counted at all. For example, take the selling of public roads (built with tax payers money). The money made by the private co is included as "production" however, these company use sensors to know when your car enters and exits their toll road; they are earning without hiring anyone to man the toll-booths any more. In fact, these deals have a negative impact on real production: because my cost of doing business (transporting my manufactured goods) has only gone up as well as my cost of going to work has gone up. Another example of redistribution of wealth to fewer and fewer hands. (More importantly) Apple and other companies have manufacturing in China because its China that provides the infrastructure making them cost competitive despite the rising wages.

#2: Sure let's give him another year.
  • You would be right if India mostly controls its own economy today. ie fixing GST implementation and the availability of cash for transactions would be enough to kick things into high gear of +7%-8% GDP change.
  • You would be wrong if India imports lots of commodity and the prices of which have firmed up. ie no more easy lunch as oil has bounced from USD $30/barrel to $50; not to mention the lack of private investments and the problems of bank NPAs.
I am in the 2nd camp for variety of reasons. The biggest of them is what is likely going on behind the scenes. India is skipping the industrial phase (mostly) and becoming a service economy. Service economies by their very nature tend to have a smaller middle class; think Madagascar, an extreme example, living off of servicing tourists. Here is a link to a concise summary by a report from a Sri Lankan (Modi introduces a GST to soothe the neocons) on what, why and how of the drastic changes and why it's bad for 495 million poor people of India.

#3: Your prediction for the remaining 3 quarters of FY18:
FY-18, Q2: 6%
FY-18, Q3: 7.3%
FY-18, Q4: 7.7%

Let's reconvene in June of 2018. Inshallah I will comeback to this thread and post the results; whether right or wrong I will post what has been reported.
 
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