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Hollywood looking to India for post-production work

London, May 12: Impressed with the low-budget and good production quality Bollywood films, Hollywood is eyeing India to outsource its post-production and shooting work.

"There is obviously a lot of talent in India...Hollywood is looking back to India to commission a lot of the post- production work and shooting work," Kishore Ltive of Eros International said.

"If you look at the quality of Bollywood movies, we can produce those movies at maybe 10 or 20% of the cost that Hollywood can do.

"If Hollywood is spending 100 million dollaRs a movie, we make the same kind of movie for 10 to 20 million dollaRs budget in India," Lulla, who recently won the BDO Stoy Hayward Business of the Year award at the Eastern Eye Asian Business Awards function, told the `The Daily Telegraph.`

He said that Hindi films were expanding their global reach due to the evolving taste of audience.

"Consumer taste is evolving. So, countries like Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Russia and Germany have started consuming Indian movies.

"This is like fresh air for them when they see a totally different kind of movie with a lot of family values, music and Indian culture," Lulla noted.

He said the booming Indian economy further contributed to the film industry`s growth.

"There are 300 million people in the middle class in India at the moment and they have OME which they are spending in multiplexes," he said.

Lulla said that with an increase in the number of theateRs in India, more money would be earned from a movie which would be channelled for production.

"There are only 13,000 screens in India at the moment. This will go up to 50,000 in the next five to ten yeaRs. Once that happens you would see a film grossing may be 50 million to 100 million dollaRs. And once that happens, you will see a lot of money going back into production, Lulla said.
 
No slowdown yet: Inflation holds the key
TIMES NEWS NETWORK[ MONDAY, MAY 14, 2007 12:37:47 AM]

The March ’07 numbers for industrial growth, at 13%, indicate that there has been no general slowdown in industrial growth because of monetary tightening. That said, the effect of higher interest rates are felt with a lag and the last round of rate hikes were in late March.

Industrial data for the first quarter of the current fiscal, 2007-08, may thus provide a better indicator of the impact of higher interest rates. An examination of the disaggregated data for March indicates that the economy may be shifting to a more investment-led growth cycle.

While consumer goods grew 14%, consumer durables rose by just 2.7%. It was primarily FMCG items (consumer non-durables) which propelled the sector forward by 18.5%. The slowdown in consumer durables chimes with anecdotal evidence that the rate of growth of credit disbursement for the retail sector (financing for housing, cars, education, and consumer durables) is slowing down.

Data on credit growth for December ‘06, the latest available, show a slowdown in year to year growth rates compared to June and October. The exceptions are industry and agriculture, an outcome very much in keeping with the RBI and the government’s policy objectives.

Basic and intermediate capital goods continue to grow strongly, according to the March industry data. There is some evidence that credit card defaults are rising. Industry sources say that as many as 13% of accounts may be in trouble (more than 30 days overdue) compared to 7% a year ago. Interest rates for personal loans to the sub-prime category have spiked sharply, in some cases to more than 20%.

There is no indication yet that capital spending by Indian companies is slowing. This is partly because India Inc has had access to external markets by way of ECB and FCCBs and also because of confidence that the size of the Indian market will grow exponentially.

In the near term, another bit of data released on Friday showed that inflation had dropped to 5.66%. Most analysts feel that WPI could drift close to 5% by June because of the high base effect. The behaviour of inflation would, in turn, determine whether the RBI’s monetary tightening is over.
 
India retail frenzy fuels supply chains
By Joseph Tharakan
Mumbai

With the boom in India's retail sector, foreign behemoths are moving in while domestic players are ramping up their operations. The investment frenzy is being led by foreign giants such as Wal Mart, which recently took its first step into the sub-continent through a joint venture with Bharti. Meanwhile, France's Carrefour and the UK's Tesco, along with other global players, are waiting in the wings waiting for an opportunity.

Domestic industrial giants are not far behind. Reliance Industries has on its drawing board a US$6 billion plan to create 100 million sq ft of retail space; the Aditya Birla Group is planning to invest $3.6 billion in its foray into the retail market; and industrial giant Tatas has also drawn up plans to enter the retail race.

Existing domestic retail players are pouring more money into their expansion projects. The Future group, previous called Pantaloon and owner of the Big Bazaar retail chain (below), is planning to create a retail space of 30 million sq ft by 2009-10 while Shoppers' Stop will add another six million sq ft of retail space to its existing operations.

Logistics plays a major role in the operations of retail chains and these players are also entering the arena in a big away. Many foreign players have already opened shop in India, while others are keenly tracking developments. Some retailers have their own logistics subsidiaries, but most of them use third-party service providers (3PLs).

"The Indian logistics sector is at the beginning of a strong growth path. Besides retail, there are also other growth drivers such as manufacturing, FMCG (fast moving consumer goods) and auto components,'' according to a research analyst at Mumbai-based Edelweiss.

Over the past few months, a dozen international players in the logistics and warehousing businesses have initiated studies towards establishing their presence in India, said industry officials. For instance, foreign companies such as Aiko, Expeditors and Bax Global as well as parent Schenker are already in the process of setting up warehousing and distribution networks in India while Prologis and PWC Logistics are considering expanding operations.

"We estimate the Indian logistics market is worth around $45 billion and by 2015 we expect it to reach almost $122 billlion at a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of over 11 percent, which is higher than the rate of growth of the Indian economy," said John Allan, chief executive officer of DHL Exel Supply Chain & Global Forwarding.

In the next decade, there will be a substantial growth in the manufacturing segment, which will trickle down as an opportunity for logistics companies, he added.

"There are two reasons why we see as a major opportunity here,'' said Allan. "First, India serves as a good base for manufacturing for exports such as automobile components and pharmaceuticals. Second, the size of the domestic market is itself getting larger."

International majors such as DHL, UPS and FedEx are competing strongly for the small and medium enterprises (SMEs) sector. Almost 70 percent of DHL's customers are SMEs while UPS claims that almost 75 percent of its customers are SMEs

Many reckon that India's logistics spending, at 13 percent of GDP, is among the highest in the world due to a multi-layered tax system, infrastructure bottlenecks and other inefficiencies. "Compared to the developed markets, logistics costs here tend to be higher or almost twice as high in underdeveloped markets," said Allan.

But that does not perturb domestic players. Edelweiss estimates leading domestic logistics players, such as Concor, Gateway Distriparks (GDL), Allcargo, Sical Logistics, Transport Corporation of India (TCI) and Gati, will spend around $809 million over the next three years on expansion. These companies together had invested about $119 million in the last fiscal year.

Both Concor and Sical have announced plans to set up cold chains while GDL and Sical have forayed into container train operations and TCI and Gati are investing heavily in warehousing. Other trucking and courier companies are also leveraging their networks to offer express and supply chain distribution solutions, apart from offering 3PL expertise.

Currently the services on offer range from transportation to warehousing and inventory management, but industry officials said in the near future, the companies will have to expand their products basket to include new value-added services, such as packaging, labelling and reverse logistics.
 
Screwvala's search for a new twist brings Bollywood to the Square Mile
Mumbai media mogul is changing the world's view of the Indian film industry

Randeep Ramesh in Mumbai
Monday May 14, 2007
The Guardian


In the film business, name recognition is everything. Luckily for Ronnie Screwvala nobody is going to forget his.

"It is a great ice breaker that always gets the meeting off to a bright start," the Mumbai media mogul grins before explaining that his surname probably meant his forefathers, from the Parsi minority, were involved in carpentry. "I don't think it would be the other interpretation."

In the past two years Screwvala has become the most sought after movie producer in Indian cinema with his UTV studio remoulding Bollywood in Hollywood's image.

He co-produced, with Rupert Murdoch's Fox studios, the summer hit the Namesake, set in Calcutta and Boston. Last month saw his biggest coup when UTV announced it was teaming up with Fox to produce the next film by M Night Shyamalan, the director behind Signs and the Sixth Sense, for £29m.

With a dozen films ready to realise next year, Screwvala has big plans to expand. The Mumbai-listed group aims to raise £30m-40m by listing all its motion picture production activities on London's Aim market next month.

Screwvala says UTV is an Indian business with an "unique international story" that wants to be benchmarked against western firms. He also needs "international currency" for deals.

"Our next stage of growth could come from mergers and acquisitions and for that we need an international currency to be looked at seriously when we went out for a deal. Are we looking at western companies to buy? Yes."

A former cable salesman, Screwvala has quietly built up a media empire in India on a triple-pronged strategy as a broadcaster, film-maker and new media company. Last year revenues were £25m. Screwvala says they will be five times as large by 2009.

UTV, which began life as a production company, made its name by creating a teenagers' channel, Humgama, in India from scratch and selling it to Disney for £15m last year. Disney also paid £7.5m for a 15% stake in UTV. "We wanted a long-term strategic partnership with Disney."

Bollywood is Screwvala's first love. The country churns out 1,000 movies a year but is only a £1bn business. Hollywood by contrast produces half the number of films but makes nine times more money.

To make money UTV opted to professionalise an industry still largely in the hands of movie dynasties. It draws up budgets, sticks to shooting timetables, lays out a marketing strategy and makes distribution plans.

Gone too are the three hours of song and dance interspersed with tearful family reconciliations. Screwvala is producing shorter films with tauter scripts. The movies are more realistic and a little less escapist.

Oscar nomination

The first big success was Rang de Basanti, a film about disaffected youth that was nominated for an Oscar. His latest movie Metro, which premiered in London last week, features three lovelorn couples and most notably sees Shilpa Shetty as a bored housewife tempted by infidelity.

Next week he travels to the Cannes festival with another film, Goal, about an amateur football team in west London.

"It is a universal story about the underdog winning against the big boys. We are breaking the mould in terms of genre and storytelling. Indian movies are traditionally known for high entertainment and long duration. But young people in Indian cities are very discerning these days and they will not spend three hours watching a movie."

All that is happening in the country, says Screwvala, is that much like the western world urban India is becoming time-poor and cash-rich. "It is the same in Hollywood. If King Kong did not work as well as it should have it was because it was a three-hour movie."

When Screwvala talks about Hollywood these days people listen. Scripts for a UTV movie about an British stuntwomen working in Burma at the end of the the second world war lie with Keira Knightley and Uma Thurman.

He also backed the latest film by the US comedian Chris Rock, a rom-com called I Think I Love My Wife. Requiring only £6m to make, it was a "compelling budget for a movie with someone like Chris Rock. And it has made back the money."

That appears to be just the beginning. UTV's film division will make two Will Smith movies - one is animated and the other is a more trademark action flick.

The US actor first came to India last year to promote an entertainment channel for Sony but ended up chatting with Screwvala. The result was a £15m co-production deal with Sony and Smith's Overbrook Entertainment.

The cartoon film has generated a buzz in the industry because it potentially marries Hollywood scriptwriters with Smith's appeal and low-cost Indian animation. Analysts point out that Hoodwinked, a low-cost cartoon feature made in Spain for only £6m, grossed £50m in 2005.

"Animation is something we are good at," says Screwvala. "A Shrek may cost $100m to make [in Hollywood], but if you get it right the outlay may be just $30m or $25m."

Video games are also a key part of Screwvala's plans. Last year he spent £16m buying controlling interests in the mobile phone game designer Indiagames and the UK-based console gaming company Ignition. What caught Screwvala's eye in the British company was a "high-end" game called War Devil that he thought could also become a movie a la Lara Croft.

Although in conversation the 50-year-old is languid and smooth, it is clear he is a man in a hurry. From July he begins to roll out eight new television channels, focusing on horror, world cinema and entertainment and hoping to attract to the country's most elusive and populous demographic: 16-35-year-olds.

"[India] is a growing market and an opportunity. Sometimes the tail wags the dog but really the content creates the demand."
 
May 14, 2007
Booming trade, air traffic between India and the USA :tup:

By Anand Kumar

WHEN the Airbus A380, dubbed the ‘green giant,’ flew into Delhi – and later Mumbai – last week, it attracted thousands of curious onlookers in both the cities, most of who were struck by its sheer size. The A380, the world’s biggest aircraft, arrived nearly 40 years after the Jumbo jet – the venerable Boeing 747 – landed in India.

While the arrival of the Airbus brought work at both the airports to a standstill (with passengers, airport employees and airline staff rushing to catch a glimpse of it) the new aircraft also excited the aviation industry in the country. The A380 comes at a time when traffic between India and the USA is booming, and airlines are planning to launch both non-stop and one-stop services between the two countries.

The India-US sector is today one of the most lucrative and also the busiest. About 1.5 million passengers travel on this sector every year, and the market is growing by a healthy 10 per cent. Of course, other routes, including India-UK and India-Gulf are also equally buoyant, but the one to the US is among the most profitable.

However, things are likely to shape up dramatically over the next few weeks on this route. While several airlines – including the nation’s flag carrier, Air India – are planning to launch non-stop flights between the two countries, the sector is also being opened up for private Indian airlines.

Jet Airways, the country’s leading domestic carrier, plans to launch one-stop services to New York via Brussels from July. The airline is acquiring Boeing B777 aircraft for its first flights across the Atlantic. The airline also plans flights to San Francisco via Shanghai later in the year.

Another private carrier, Kingfisher Airlines, is impatiently waiting to get government approval for the launch of its international operations. Vijay Mallya, the liquor baron, who launched the airline about two years ago, says if the government does not speed up the clearance, he will start services from America to India, using his US subsidiary Kingfisher International.

When the Indian government threw open international routes to private airlines, it stipulated a clause insisting that a domestic carrier should have flown for five years before applying for international flying rights. Only Jet Airways and Air Sahara – which is being acquired by Jet – qualify for international routes at present.

Mallya, who is also a member of the upper house of the Indian Parliament, is not willing to wait for another three years, by which time Jet Airways would have established its mark in the sector.

The visit of the A380 to India was sponsored by Mallya to mark his airline’s second anniversary. Kingfisher Airlines is also the only Indian airline to have ordered the giant aircraft. It has placed an order for five aircraft, and has an option for five more.

But Airbus officials are hopeful of selling the giant aircraft to many more airlines in the country, including domestic and low-cost carriers. The European aircraft maker hopes to sell over 50 A380s – including a few freighters – over the next 20 years in India. Each A380 costs about $300 million.

According to John Leahy, chief operating officer (customers), Airbus, the company expects 20 orders from India over the next one year for the new aircraft. It has so far received orders for over 150 aircraft from different international airlines, and the first deliveries are likely to be made later this year to Singapore Airlines, followed later by Emirates and Qantas.

Kingfisher will be getting the deliveries only in 2011, in time for the launch of its non-stop flights to the US – Mumbai-New York and Bangalore-San Francisco. Airbus officials last week pooh-poohed speculation that most Indian airports were unable to handle the huge aircraft, which can seat 850 passengers in an all-economy configuration, and over 500 in a three-class configuration. Passengers in the upper classes can relax in lounges and bars in the upper deck of the aircraft.

Officials from the aircraft-maker were confident that even low-cost carriers in India would show interest in it, as the plane can carry up to 850 passengers, and can even operate on short-haul routes. Domestic airlines could be interested in deploying the super-jumbo on busy routes like Mumbai-Delhi, Mumbai-Kolkata, Delhi-Chennai/Bangalore, or Delhi-Bangalore.

Leahy notes that the A380 can land and take-off from 70 airports around the world. Kiran Rao, executive vice-president, points out that all major Indian airports are capable of handling the aircraft. But there’s likely to be a bitter dog-fight over the Indian skies between the two major international plane-makers, Airbus and its American rival, Boeing, which is pushing for its Boeing 777 and 787.

Rao adds that the global aviation industry is growing by about 20 per cent annually – in India, the figures are much higher, around 50 per cent – and there is a growing need for an aircraft the size of an A380. Besides, airlines operating flights between India and the US, other European and Gulf carriers could also press the A380 for services to India, say Airbus executives.

Both the Europe (especially the UK) and Gulf are high-volume routes with thousands of passengers travelling daily between cities like Mumbai/Delhi and London, Frankfurt and Dubai. The A380 is being positioned to serve such sectors as well.

Carriers from America are already operating non-stop flights between the two countries. Continental and American Airlines operate non-stop flights between New Delhi and New York and Chicago respectively, while Delta flies non-stop between Mumbai and New York.

State-owned Air India, which is in the process of merging with Indian (formerly Indian Airlines), the government-owned domestic giant, is also launching non-stop services to the USA (New York and Chicago) from June. The airline currently operates about 24 weekly flights to the US, which will expand dramatically in the coming weeks, as it starts getting delivery of new Boeing aircraft.

Continental, the world’s fifth largest airline, is also launching non-stop flights between Mumbai and New Jersey.The airline announced that it was advancing the launch date by a month to October 2, following positive market response to the proposed flights. “We have been delighted with the response to our original announcement from customers in both India and the US, and we are confident the service will be a great success,” remarks Jim Summerford, the airline’s vice-president for Europe, the Middle East and India.

The India-US aviation sector took off in a big way following the signing of an Open Skies agreement between the two countries in 2005. According to India’s External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee, the open skies treaty is set to have effect in areas much beyond the aviation sector. “It is not just impacting on figures of aircraft procurements, but is also reflected in tourism figures.”

There has also been a sharp upsurge in Indo-US trade ties. The US is today India’s leading foreign investor and its largest trade partner. India is the fastest growing export market for the US and bilateral trade has grown by over five times over the last 16 years – from a mere $5.6 billion in 1990 to $31.92 billion in 2006.

The balance of trade is in India’s favour, with exports to the US growing by 16 per cent last year to $22 billion. American exports to India soared by 26 per cent to $10 billion. Foreign direct investments from the US amounts to over $5.5 billion, accounting for 13 per cent of total FDI since 1991.

Not surprising then that air traffic between the two countries has also been growing sharply in recent months. Airlines from both countries – and the two major aircraft makers – are now positioning themselves to cater to this growing market.

http://www.dawn.com/2007/05/14/ebr9.htm
 
UK 'chikus' head for India to build new life
15 May, 2007 l 0224 hrs ISTl
RASHMEE ROSHAN LALL/TIMES NEWS NETWORK

LONDON: First, there were the ‘coconuts’—brown on the outside and white on the inside—that almost-mocking metaphor of choice for second-generation Indians in the West. Now, there are the ‘chikus’—brown on the outside, a lighter brown within—determinedly reversing the immigration flow to make their homes, and hopefully their fortunes, in the India their parents left half-a-century ago.

Pravin Mistry and his young wife Neelima are 'chikus', the transition generation of Western-raised Indians heading 'home'. Born and bred in Britain, the Mistrys are proud possessors of brand new blue-and-gold 'Overseas Citizen of India' (OCI) passports that herald their dual nationality. The two young Britons are waiting with feverish impatience to find the right jobs to embark on their passage to India.

But they are not alone. Their friends, similarly British-born-and-bred Vandana and Dipak Poria, are already 'home', comfortably settled in Pune, complete with a good school for their son and their own Knowledge Process Outsourcing (KPO) company.

The foursome typifies the chiku brigade, a growing army of Western-raised Indians on the march to the motherland two years after dual nationality aka OCI became a reality.

Says Pravin, who has put in 23 years in the field of plastic-manufacturing plants across the world, "The new West is the East. Why will we pass up the chance to go and live and work in India? It's not just that India is booming, but when I go there it's like I've found a missing piece of the jigsaw."
 
Kalam for national policy to create global talent pool
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New Delhi, May 15 (IANS) Highlighting the demand-supply gap of skilled manpower in the country, President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam Monday underlined the need for a national policy to create a global human development cadre.

"...A National Policy for creating a Global Human Development Cadre for India can be evolved through a national team drawing experts from multiple ministries, including education system, and various professional associations and societies," Kalam said at a summit on education organised by the industry lobby Confederation of Indian Industry (CII).

"Evolution of such a policy in a time bound manner will generate quality, knowledge and skills needed by all sectors of Indian economy and globally employable human resources. The aim of the education system should be to create employment generators rather than employment seekers apart from building research capability," he said.

The president said there was a large gap in the availability of employable skills. For example, as per the NASSCOM and McKinsey Report 2005, it is estimated that the "IT, ITES and BPO sector alone will need 9 million direct jobs and 6 million indirect jobs in construction, retail and transportation by 2010, whereas we do not have such a capacity in the country to generate this number which will be acceptable to the three sectors of economy".

Spelling out the methods to bridge the gap, he said the educational system should highlight the importance of entrepreneurship and prepare the students to get oriented towards setting up of enterprises which will "provide them creativity, freedom and ability to generate wealth".

"The banking system should provide venture capital right from every village level to the prospective entrepreneurs for undertaking new enterprises. We need a large number of venture capital institutions that can take risk and promote entrepreneurs," he added.

The president also asked industry leaders and academicians to "study the role of education in improving the competitiveness index rating of India within ten ranks from 43".
 
Japan's Olympus Opens First India Store
Posted 14 May 2007 @ 09:20 am

Japan's Olympus Imaging Corp. opened its first retail store in India Monday, offering a wide range of digital cameras in a market dominated by rivals Nikon Corp. and Canon Inc.

Until now, Olympus sold its products in India through franchise, as the government eased rules only in 2005 to allow foreign companies open single-brand retail stores in the country.

The first store opened in New Delhi, and five to six more stores in other cities will open in the next couple months, according to an Olympus statement.

The company plans to eventually build a countrywide network of stores and service centers with an investment of 500 million rupees (US$12 million, euro9 million) over the next two to three years, the statement said.

"'The power of the Indian economy is something that is now palpable,"' said Yoshitomo Nagashima, the Olympus' General Manager for Asia and the Middle East, in the statement.

Camera sales in India more than doubled to 700,000 last year and are expected to reach 1.6 million by 2010, the statement said. Digital cameras account for about 42 percent of total sales.

Olympus said it is aiming to achieve 30 percent to 40 percent growth in its India sales over the next two to three years.

Besides opening its own retail stores, the company also plans to expand its dealer network in the country.

The Indian market has been traditionally dominated by Nikon, but sales of Canon and Sony cameras have soared in recent years.
 
India-China bilateral trade set to touch $40 bn
ANIL K JOSEPH

PTI[ TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2007 08:30:37 PM]

BEIJING: Senior trade representatives of India and China today forecast that the bilateral trade volume will surge from the current $25 billion to $40 billion by 2009, a full year ahead of the target set by the two governments. During the first quarter (Jan-Mar) of this year, bilateral trade has touched USD 8.2 billion, soaring by 58 per cent, Vice President of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade (CCPIT), Wang Jinzhen said.

"The business communities in China and India are determined to raise bilateral trade up to USD 40 billion by the year 2010. But if we increase our bilateral trade at this speed (58 per cent), I think we can reach USD 40 billion by 2009, an year earlier than targeted," Wang said at a India-China Business Luncheon Meeting organised by ASSOCHAM, CCPIT and the Indian Embassy here.

Concurring with Wang's forecast, Member of Parliament and Managing Director of Videocon Industries Ltd., Rajkumar Dhoot said that as per an ASSOCHAM forecast, India-China bilateral trade could be more than double to USD 43 billion in the coming three years. During Chinese President Hu Jintao's state visit to India last November, both the countries set a bilateral trade target of USD 40 billion by 2010.

Dhoot, heading an ASSOCHAM delegation to China, noted that the growth in Chinese exports to India was among the fastest for the world's third largest trading power. However, he noted that Chinese investment in India was very low, only accounting for .30 per cent of all foreign direct investment approved by the country. This must improve, Dhoot said, adding the business communities of the two countries should look into the business opportunities more seriously.

At the same time, he noted that Chinese companies have taken up project engineering worth over a billion US dollars. He also pointed out that there was huge scope for Chinese companies to invest in India's growing infrastructure sector where USD 320 billion is going to be invested in the coming years.

Giving a brief introduction of the booming Indian economy, Dhoot told the Chinese investors that India had a 200-million-strong middle class and that the economy was heading for sustained growth, offering immense opportunity for foreign investors. Wang, who has visited India 15 times so far, noted that both India and China are developing countries with big population with both economies developing very fast.

"This provides us with very good opportunity to further develop the relations between the two nations," he said. "However, we have to understand that this is just the beginning and we have to improve understanding between each other. Understanding is the most important factor for us to do business. Without understanding it is impossible for the business people to come together," he emphasised.

He also called for the improvement in the 'business environment' of the two countries so as to facilitate easier access to the markets and do business. Sanjay Verma, Commercial Councillor in Indian Embassy, said the most positive aspect of India-China relations is the progress the two sides have made on the economic and commercial front.
 
Spanish firm prefers India to China for joint venture
Posted May 15th, 2007 by Indian-Muslim

By Fakir Balaji,

Bangalore, May 15 (IANS) A leading Spanish manufacturer of printed circuit boards (PCB) has opted to set up its first overseas joint venture in India with an eye on the growing domestic demand and huge export potential.

Though China and Taiwan are way ahead of India in manufacturing PCBs and other electronic products, the Euro 18-million Circuitos Impresos Profesionalses, S.A. (CIPSA) has decided to locate the 50:50 joint venture - CIPSA-RIC in Bangalore with two Indian entrepreneurs - Anil Gupta and Alok Garg - and invest more to expand the production capacity.

"We have found India a strategic location for our first overseas venture outside Spain. Though manufacturing costs are cheaper by 10-12 percent in China, we have opted to come here (Bangalore) in view of the opportunities India offers in terms of skills, resources, market and huge export potential," CIPSA director general Evarist Michavila told IANS here.

With an upfront investment of $10 million (Rs.450 million), the JV has started manufacturing single, double and multi-layer PCBs and membrane switches for the domestic as well as export markets.

Having reached full capacity utilisation in the first year of operations last fiscal (2006-07) and posting a turnover of $10 million, the venture partners have doubled the JV's authorized capital to $20 million (Rs.900 million) in this fiscal (2007-08) for expanding the production capacity and meet the growing demand from the parent firm (CIPSA), European and Indian OEMs.

CIPSA accounts for 70 percent of the JV's exports, while the balance 30 percent goes to OEMs such as Zollner, Technomeca and BHTC in Germany. Of the total production, 65 percent is exported and the remaining (35 percent) is shipped to leading Indian OEMs/vendors such as L&T and Procot.

"To meet the increasing demand for our products in Europe and the sub-continent, we are investing more (Rs.400 million) to expand the manufacturing capacity with a third facility near the existing two plants at Doddaballapur on the outskirts of Bangalore by March 2008," Michavilla said.

Giving an industry perspective, Gupta and Garg said that though the global market for PCBs and membrane switches was attractive despite competition from China and Taiwan, the domestic demand was no less. They attributed this to the robust economy fuelling consumption of electronic products, consumer durables and high-tech products, including handsets and personal computers.

According to the Indian Printed Circuit Board Association (IPCA), of the $550-million worth of PCB/switches sold in the country in 2006, the share of Indian PCB firms was only $110 million, while products worth $440 million were imported from China, Taiwan and the South East Asian region.

The Taiwan Printed Circuit Board Association (TPCA) has estimated the PCB market size worldwide to be $45 billion in 2008 as against $33 billion in 2004.

"Our game plan is to join the volume-driven game and compete with our Chinese or Taiwanese counterparts on price points to capture a fair share of the global market and meet the growing requirements of Indian OEMs, who are still import-depended heavily," Michavila affirmed.

For this fiscal (FY 2008), the Indo-Spanish JV has projected 100 percent growth in turnover to post about $20 million and grow by 50-70 percent year-on-year (YoY) over the next three years to cross $100 million revenue target by fiscal 2011-12.
 
India’s Plastics Industry to Rival China According to Principia Partners' In-Depth Assessment

EXTON, Pa.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--For plastics producers worldwide, India represents a range of highly promising new opportunities for growth. The fragmented plastics industry in this country is beginning to consolidate, governmental regulations and trade barriers are coming down due to India's recent admission to the WTO, and some large North American plastics manufacturers have already begun doing business there.

Principia Partners announces a comprehensive market study, PLASTICS IN INDIA: AN EMERGING GROWTH ECONOMY. The study is designed to help global plastics producers and processors better understand and assess their prospects for participation in this rapidly emerging economy.

With a population over one billion, 40% under age 15, opportunities for plastics producers in India include near-term rapid growth in the nation's internal consumption of plastic products. The Indian middle class is 300 million and rising, and the annual GDP growth rate is 8%.

In addition, the national goal of becoming a manufacturing hub similar to China may present opportunities for plastics producers in all parts of the value chain. Growth in the plastics industry in India is expected to average double-digit rates within five years.

Jim Morton, a Senior Partner at Principia explains “For perspective, per capita plastic consumption in North America is about 200 pounds; in China, 50 pounds. Plastic consumption in India is less than 15 pounds per capita, but will reach over 40 pounds by 2015. Widely accepted projections foresee explosive growth in the general consumption of plastics for applications ranging from disposable products to automotive parts to super-durables such as building products."

While the plastics industry structure in India is characterized by many low volume processors and manufacturers, consolidation has already begun, which is often a precursor of industry growth characterized by both greater volumes and higher margins, based on economies of scale. In addition to growth in products for local consumption, many expect India to become a manufacturing hub rivaling China for production capacity and for feeding export markets with finished goods. This study will explore issues that affect the speed of economic development and corresponding opportunities for foreign investment.

Principia’s study will serve as an important baseline analysis for forecasting and business planning purposes by existing and new industry participants. Using 2006 as the baseline, the study will analyze the drivers and trends within the region and provide forecasts covering the next five year by each major plastic, enduse market, and plastic process. The study will cover all key polymers, and will be exceptionally useful for determining if, where and when to make a strategic business move in India. The study will distinguish between products for local consumption and those for export.

Principia Partners relies on extensive first-hand field research for its industry studies. Information for this study will be gathered through more than 500 interviews across the entire plastics industry value chain. Interviews will be conducted within the country with major suppliers of each plastic type in the study scope, as well as key processors and OEMs.
 
Manufacturing sector posts 14 per cent growth
15 May, 2007 l 1814 hrs ISTlIANS

NEW DELHI: India's manufacturing sector registered the highest growth in over a decade at 14.1 per cent in March 2007, up from 10.1 per cent in the same month of the previous year, the commerce and industry ministry said Tuesday.

The growth rate of the sector has doubled since 2002-03 from six per cent to 12.3 per cent in 2006-07.

"This augurs well for the 11th Plan (2007-2012), which envisages a growth of 12 per cent for the manufacturing sector," Commerce and Industry Minister Kamal Nath said in a statement.

Industries that performed well during the period are wood and wood products, furniture and fixtures, metal products and parts, food products, basic metal and alloy industries and cotton textiles.

As compared to 8.2 per cent in the previous year, industrial growth during 2006-07 went up by 11.3 per cent, which is the highest growth of the industrial sector since 1995-96, the statement said.

In 2006-07, foreign direct investment (FDI) in India rose to $16 billion compared to $5.5 billion in 2005-06, a major chunk of which came from the US, Britain, Mauritius, the Netherlands and Singapore, which have contributed 83 per cent of the total FDI inflows.

Services, electrical equipments (including computer software and electronics), construction activities, telecommunications and real estate are some of the sectors that attracted maximum FDI.

The construction and real estate sectors have together received $1.45 billion during 2006-07 which is about 12 per cent compared to 3.4 per cent of the total FDI inflows received during the year 2005-06, the statement said.
 
McAfee Upgrading India Center

McAfee is upgrading its engineering center in India into a complete business subsidiary and will target, among other things, the large market for security risk management.


“It won’t just be an engineering and development center anymore, but will go beyond that – into renewal and business development,” Roger J. King, the company’s executive VP for worldwide sales, said in Bangalore.

One of the prime areas McAfee will explore in India in the near future is security risk management, which includes compliance management, said King. It will specifically address the growing needs of CIOs and CFOs for business reporting and analysis, he added.

Outlining McAfee’s growth plans in India, King said McAfee had ramped up its headcount in India to 800 – a 20 percent increase over last year’s figure. In 2006, McAfee committed an investment of over Rs. 360 crore for the India center over a four-year period.

Currently, 20 percent of the company’s Asia-Pacific business comes from India, said King. Corporate business accounts for 70 percent of its Indian revenues, said Karthik Shahani, McAfee’s regional director in India.

Shahani said security practices in India are on par with the best of the world. The technical nature of the Indian buyer is very strong, he asserted.

“Users in the BPO/ITES space are at the leading edge of security in the country, as are banking and financial companies that have to compete with foreign banking establishments,” he explained.

“However, IT users do have their task cut out in the realm of security compliance, policies and investments,” Shahani said, averring with the spirit of a CIO-PricewaterhouseCoopers information security survey last year. The survey found that “India lags far behind the rest of the world in instituting even the most basic information security practices and tools.” This trend is unique to PSUs, among other old economy users in India, said Shahani.

The BPO/ITES segment accounts for a significant portion of McAfee’s revenues in India. These and other small and medium enterprise users will constitute a bulk of the market in coming years, said Shahani.
 
India's biggest economic trouble - unstable escalating oil price - India seeks Saudi help but eventually Indian economy will collapse for oil
Media Release
Jan. 17, 2007





India produces littlle if any oil but it is consuming oil like America thinking FDI and outsourcing income will support it for ever. India seeks Saudi help for stabilising global oil prices. All these will fail and India will collapse in economic meltdown.

India today asked Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil exporter, to rein in volatility in the international oil market and help stabilise oil prices at levels sustainable by developing economies.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told the visiting Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi that high oil prices had hurt import dependent economies like India and the oil producers'' cartel OPEC should do much more to rein in volatility, official sources said.

www,indiadaily.com
 
MARCH 19, 2007

the trouble with india


When foreigners say Bangalore is India's version of Silicon Valley, the high-tech office park called Electronics City is what they're often thinking of. But however much Californians might hate traffic-clogged Route 101, the main drag though the Valley, it has nothing on Hosur Road. This potholed, four-lane stretch of gritty pavement—the primary access to Electronics City—is pure chaos. Cars, trucks, buses, motorcycles, taxis, rickshaws, cows, donkeys, and dogs jostle for every inch of the roadway as horns blare and brakes squeal. Drivers run red lights and jam their vehicles into any available space, paying no mind to pedestrians clustered desperately on median strips like shipwrecked sailors.


Slide Show >>Pass through the six-foot-high concrete walls into Electronics City, though, and the loudest sounds you hear are the chirping of birds and the whirr of electric carts that whisk visitors from one steel-and-glass building to the next. Young men and women stroll the manicured pathways that wend their way through the leafy 80-acre spread or coast quietly on bicycles along the smooth asphalt roads.

With virtually no mass transit in Bangalore, Indian technology firm Infosys Technologies Ltd. spends $5 million a year on buses, minivans, and taxis to transport its 18,000 employees to and from Electronics City. And traffic jams mean workers can spend upwards of four hours commuting each day. "India has underinvested in infrastructure for 60 years, and we're behind what we need by 10 to 12 years," says T.V. Mohandas Pai, director of human resources for Infosys.

India's high-tech services industry has set the country's economic flywheel spinning. Growth is running at 9%-plus this year. The likes of Wal-Mart (WMT ), Vodafone (VOD ), and Citigroup (C ) are placing multibillion-dollar bets on the country, lured by its 300 million-strong middle class. In spite of a recent drop, the Bombay stock exchange's benchmark Sensex index is still up more than 40% since June. Real estate has shot through the roof, with some prices doubling in the past year.

But this economic boom is being built on the shakiest of foundations. Highways, modern bridges, world-class airports, reliable power, and clean water are in desperately short supply. And what's already there is literally crumbling under the weight of progress. In December, a bridge in eastern India collapsed, killing 34 passengers in a train rumbling underneath. Economic losses from congestion and poor roads alone are as high as $6 billion a year, says Gajendra Haldea, an adviser to the federal Planning Commission.

For all its importance, the tech services sector employs just 1.6 million people, and it doesn't rely on good roads and bridges to get its work done. India needs manufacturing to boom if it is to boost exports and create jobs for the 10 million young people who enter the workforce each year. Suddenly, good infrastructure matters a lot more. Yet industry is hobbled by overcrowded highways where speeds average just 20 miles per hour. Some ports rely on armies of laborers to unload cargo from trucks and lug it onto ships. Across the state of Maharashtra, major cities lose power one day a week to relieve pressure on the grid. In Pune, a city of 4.5 million, it's lights out every Thursday—forcing factories to maintain expensive backup generators. Government officials were shocked last year when Intel Corp. (INTC ) chose Vietnam over India as the site for a new chip assembly plant. Although Intel declined to comment, industry insiders say the reason was largely the lack of reliable power and water in India.

Add up this litany of woes and you understand why India's exports total less than 1% of global trade, compared with 7% for China. Says Infosys Chairman N.R. Narayana Murthy: "If our infrastructure gets delayed, our economic development, job creation, and foreign investment get delayed. Our economic agenda gets delayed—if not derailed."

The infrastructure deficit is so critical that it could prevent India from achieving the prosperity that finally seems to be within its grasp. Without reliable power and water and a modern transportation network, the chasm between India's moneyed elite and its 800 million poor will continue to widen, potentially destabilizing the country. Jagdish N. Bhagwati, a professor at Columbia University, figures gross domestic product growth would run two percentage points higher if the country had decent roads, railways, and power. "We're bursting at the seams," says Kamal Nath, India's Commerce & Industry Minister. Without better infrastructure, "we can't continue with the growth rates we have had."

The problems are even contributing to overheating in the economy. Inflation spiked in the first week of February to a two-year high of 6.7%, due in part to bottlenecks caused by the country's lousy transport network. Up to 40% of farm produce is lost because it rots in the fields or spoils en route to consumers, which contributes to rising prices for staples such as lentils and onions.

India today is about where China was a decade ago. Back then, China's economy was shifting into overdrive, but its roads and power grid weren't up to the task. So Beijing launched a massive upgrade initiative, building more than 25,000 miles of expressways that now crisscross the country and are as good as the best roads in the U.S. or Europe. India, by contrast, has just 3,700 miles of such highways. It's no wonder that when foreign companies weigh putting new plants in China vs. India to produce global exports, China more often wins out.

China's lead in infrastructure is likely to grow, too. Beijing plows about 9% of its GDP into public works, compared with New Delhi's 4%. And because of its authoritarian government, China gets faster results. "If you have to build a road in China, just a handful of people need to make a decision," says Daniel Vasella, chief executive of pharmaceutical giant Novartis (NVS ). "If you want to build a road in India, it'll take 10 years of discussion before you get a decision."

Blame it partly on India's revolving-door democracy. Political parties typically hold power for just one five-year term before disgruntled voters, swayed by populist promises from the opposition, kick them out of office. In elections last year in the state of Tamil Nadu, for instance, a new government was voted in after it pledged to give free color TVs to poor families. "In a sanely organized society you can get a lot done. Not here," says Jayaprakash Narayan, head of Lok Satta, or People Power, a national reform party.

Then there's "leakage"—India's euphemism for rampant corruption. Nearly all sectors of officialdom are riddled with graft, from neighborhood cops to district bureaucrats to state ministers. Indian truckers pay about $5 billion a year in bribes, according to the watchdog group Transparency International. Corruption delays infrastructure projects and raises costs for those that move ahead.

Fortunately, after decades of underinvestment and political inertia, India's political leadership has awakened to the magnitude of the infrastructure crisis. A handful of major projects have been completed; others are moving forward. Work on the Golden Quadrilateral—a $12 billion initiative spanning more than 3,000 miles of four- and six-lane expressways connecting Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, and Chennai—is due to be completed this year. The first phase of a new subway in New Delhi finished in late 2005 on budget and ahead of schedule. And new airports are under construction in Bangalore and Hyderabad, with more planned elsewhere. "We have to improve the quality of our infrastructure," Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told a gathering of tech industry leaders in Mumbai on Feb. 9. "It's a priority of our government."

Singh, in fact, is promising a Marshall Plan-scale effort. The government estimates public and private organizations will chip in $330 billion to $500 billion over the next five years for highways, power generation, ports, and airports. In addition, leading conglomerates have pledged to overhaul the retailing sector. That will require infrastructure upgrades along the entire food distribution chain, from farm fields to store shelves.

Envisioning a brand-new India is the easy part; paying for it is another matter. By necessity, since the country's public debt stands at 82% of GDP, the 11th-worst ranking in the world, much of the money for these new projects will have to come from private sources. Yet India captured only $8 billion in foreign direct investment last year, compared with China's $63 billion. "Having grandiose plans isn't enough," says Yale University economics professor T.N. Srinivasan.

Just about every foreign company operating in India has a horror story of the hardships of doing business there. Nokia Corp. (NOK ) saw thousands of its cellular phones ruined last October when a shipment from its factory in Chennai was soaked by rain because there was no room to warehouse the crates of handsets at the local airport. Japan's Maruti Suzuki says trucking its cars 900 miles from its factory in Gurgaon to the port in Mumbai can take up to 10 days. That's partly due to delays at the three state borders along the way, where drivers are stalled as officials check their papers. But it's also because big rigs are barred from India's congested cities during the day, when they might bring dense traffic to a standstill. Once at the port, the Japanese company's autos can wait weeks for the next outbound ship because there's not enough dock space for cargo carriers to load and unload.

India's summer monsoons wreak havoc, too. Even relatively light rains can choke sewers, flood streets, and paralyze a city, while downpours are devastating. Two years ago, Florida-based contract manufacturer Jabil Circuit Inc. saw shipments of computers and networking gear from its plant near Mumbai delayed for five days after an epic storm. "In our business, five days is a really long time," says William D. Muir Jr., who oversees Jabil's Asian operations.

Companies often have no choice but to make the best of a bad situation. Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO ), the American networking equipment giant, has had a research and development office in India since 1999 and already has 2,000 engineers in the country. To supply the country's fast-growing telecommunications industry, Cisco decided last year to try its hand at making some parts locally. In December it contracted with another company to build Internet phones in the southeastern city of Chennai. Although Cisco says the quality of the workmanship is up to snuff, it has to fly parts in because the ports are so slow—and getting them to the factory right when they're needed is proving nettlesome. "We believe in manufacturing in India, but we don't believe in logistics in India—yet," says Wim Elfrink, Cisco's chief globalization officer. Elfrink adds that unless the Chennai operation demonstrates it can run as efficiently as Cisco setups elsewhere, it won't go into full production as planned this summer.

Even the world's largest maker of infrastructure equipment is constrained by India's feeble underpinnings. General Electric Co. (GE ) last year sold $1.2 billion worth of gear such as power generators and locomotives in India, more than double what it billed in 2005. To meet that surging demand, it is scrambling to find a location where it can manufacture locomotives in partnership with India Railways. But when GE dispatched three employees to survey a potential site the railway favored in the northern state of Bihar, the trio returned discouraged. It took five hours to drive the 50 miles from the airport to the site, and when they got there they found...nothing. "No roads, no power, no schools, no water, no hospitals, no housing," says Pratyush Kumar, president of GE Infrastructure in India. "We'd have to create everything from scratch," including many miles of railroad tracks to get the locomotives out to the main lines.

But there is a silver lining for GE and other international giants: India's infrastructure deficit could yield huge opportunities. American executives who traveled to India last November on the largest U.S. trade mission ever were tantalized by the possibilities. Jennifer Thompson, director of international planning at Oshkosh Truck Corp. (OSK ), viewed construction projects where swarms of workers carried wet concrete in buckets to be poured. That told her there's great potential in India for selling Oshkosh's mixer trucks. "There are infrastructure challenges, but we see a lot of opportunities to help them meet those challenges," she says.

That explains why so many multinationals are flocking to India. Take hotel construction: In a country with only 25,000 tourist-class hotel rooms (compared with more than 140,000 in Las Vegas alone), companies including Hilton (HLT ), Wyndham (WYN ), and Ramada have plans for 75,000 rooms on their drawing boards. Or consider telecom. Because of deregulation and ferocious demand, India boasts the fastest growth in cell-phone service anywhere, with companies adding some 6 million new customers a month. No wonder Britain's Vodafone Group PLC (VOD ) just ponied up $11 billion for a controlling interest in Hutchison Essar, India's No. 4 mobile carrier. U.S. private equity outfits also want in on the action. On Feb. 15, Blackstone Group and Citigroup announced they are teaming up with the Indian government and the Infrastructure Development Finance Corp. to set up a $5 billion fund for infrastructure investments in India.

But while the laws of supply and demand would argue that India's infrastructure gap can be filled, that logic ignores the corrosive effect of the country's politics. To gain the favor of voters, Indian politicians have long subsidized electricity and water for farmers, a policy that has discouraged private investment in those areas. That's what wrecked the now-infamous Dabhol Power plant. In the late 1990s, Enron, GE, and Bechtel spent a total of $2.8 billion building a huge complex near Mumbai capable of producing more than 2,000 megawatts of electricity. But a government power authority set prices so low that it was uneconomical for Dabhol to operate, and the whole deal fell apart. (The plant, taken over by an Indian organization, now runs only fitfully.) A 2001 law was supposed to create a framework to support private investment in power generation. But according to American construction company executives, it's not working well. "Everybody knows what needs to be done, but they have great difficulty doing it," says one of the Americans. "If the party in opposition offers subsidized power, the party in power has to give subsidized power to get reelected."

Politicians who refuse to play the game pay a steep price. N. Chandrababu Naidu, the former chief minister of the state of Andhra Pradesh, transformed the state capital of Hyderabad from a backwater into a high-tech destination by building new roads, widening others, and aggressively carving out land for factories and office parks. Google (GOOG ), IBM (IBM ), Microsoft (MSFT ), and Motorola (MOT ) have all built R&D facilities there.

His reward? Voters tossed him out of office two years ago. During his decade in power, Naidu didn't do enough for rural areas, and his challenger promised to channel state funds into irrigation projects and electricity subsidies. "Naidu thought economics were more important than politics. He was wrong," says V.S. Rao, director of the Birla Institute of Technology & Science in Hyderabad. Naidu, 56, is plotting a comeback in elections two years hence. This time, he's preaching a new gospel. "You can't just target growth," says a chastened Naidu. "You have to create policies that make the wealth trickle down to the common man."

But even when politicians say they're beefing up infrastructure, it rarely helps the poorest Indians. Agriculture is stagnant in part because of a lack of the most rudimentary of roads to get to and from fields. N. Tarupthurai, for instance, scratches out a living from a five-acre plot in Jinnuru, a village in northeastern Andhra Pradesh. But his fields are more than a mile from the nearest paved road, so each day the 40-year-old Tarupthurai must carry his tools, seeds, fertilizer, and crops down a dirt path on his back or on his bicycle. "I have asked for a road, and the government says it's under consideration," says the mustachioed, curly-haired farmer. Then he shrugs.

One reason little practical help makes it from the seats of power to India's impoverished villages is that so much money gets siphoned off along the way. With corrupt officials skimming at every step, many public works projects either go over budget or are never completed. "You figure that 25% of the cost goes to corruption," says Verghese Jacob, head of the Byrraju Foundation, which promotes rural development. "And then they do such a bad job that the road falls apart in one year and has to be patched over again," Jacob says as he jostles along in a car on a potholed byway outside Hyderabad.

None of the solutions to India's infrastructure challenges are simple, but business leaders, some enlightened government officials, and even ordinary citizens are chipping in to make things better. The most potent weapon India's reformers have against corruption is transparency. Last October a new right-to-information law went into effect requiring both central and state governments to divulge information about contracts, hiring, and expenditures to any citizen who requests it. The country is also putting to work its vaunted technology prowess to police the government. Officials in 200 districts are using software from Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. to help monitor a government program that offers every rural household a guarantee of 100 days of work per year. Most of this labor goes into public works. To minimize "leakage," the TCS software tracks every expenditure—and makes all of the information available real-time on a Web site accessible to anyone.

Sometimes frustrated Indians take matters into their own hands. Tired of spending four-plus hours a day in traffic, Aruna Newton last fall helped organize something of a women's crusade to speed up infrastructure improvements. Nearly 15,000 volunteers now monitor key road projects and meet with state officials to press for action. They even enlisted the state chief minister's mother, who helped get his attention. "It's about the collective power of the people," says Newton, a 40-year-old vice-president for Infosys. "I just wish building a road was as easy as writing a software program."

Increasingly, companies trying to expand in India have the government as a willing partner rather than a roadblock. The state of Andhra Pradesh rolled out the red carpet last year for MAS Holdings Ltd. of Sri Lanka, South Asia's largest garment manufacturer. It promised subsidized electricity, new access roads, and even a deepwater port if the company would place a huge industrial park on the southern coast. Now MAS Holdings plans to build a cluster of factories that will eventually employ 30,000 production workers. And it chose India over China. "The government support was absolutely vital," says John Chiramel, India director for MAS Holdings. "If we can work together, there's no stopping growth in this country."

A key to getting massive projects off the drawing boards is forming public-private partnerships where the government and companies share costs, risks, and rewards. In 2005, India passed a groundbreaking law permitting officials to tap such partnerships for infrastructure initiatives. Developers ante up most of the money, collect tolls or other usage fees, and eventually hand the facilities back to the government.

The first project to take advantage of the new law is the $430 million international airport scheduled to open next year in Bangalore. The facility is designed to handle 11.5 million passengers per year—nearly double the capacity of the overburdened existing airport. It will be owned by a private company, which will turn it over to the Karnataka state government after 60 years. Global engineering and equipment giant Siemens (SI ) is helping to build the facility, and Switzerland's Unique Ltd. will manage it. These companies are also equity investors. The state had to contribute just 18% of the cost. Without such an arrangement, Karnataka wouldn't be getting a new airport.

A lot of India's hopes rest on the airport deal's success. If it proves the viability of public-private partnerships, more such ventures could come pouring in. A visit to the site instills confidence. Project manager Sivaramakrishnan S. Iyer is a crusty veteran of mammoth infrastructure ventures throughout South Asia and the Mideast. Wearing a scuffed hardhat, with a two-day growth of white stubble on his face, he surveys the site from a 2.5-mile-long bed of crushed granite that will be the runway. Work goes on seven days a week, 18 hours a day. Iyer is intent on wrapping up on schedule in April, 2008. "We have the will to do it, and it will be done," he says.

Will the airport open on time? That's not within Iyer's control. Two government authorities are responsible for building the road that leads to the airport, and they're locked in a dispute over how to do it. Work hasn't started.

And so it goes in India. Unless the nation shakes off its legacy of bureaucracy, politics, and corruption, its ability to build adequate infrastructure will remain in doubt. So will its economic destiny.
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