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Shocker: Indian Reforms are Stalled!

IndoCarib

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India’s chief economic adviser, Kaushik Basu, told a gathering at a Washington think tank that reforms in India are unlikely to happen until after the next parliamentary elections in 2014.

That observation set off a firestorm among New Delhi’s political class Friday, but it’s hard to understand why. Mr. Basu only made a sober assessment of reality. Survey the Indian political landscape, with its legislative gridlock, coalition instability and feuds between the central and state governments, and it doesn’t seem far-fetched at all to imagine India being unable to push through a major reform for another two years.

Look at the evidence. India desperately needs to attract foreign capital and investment, but the government did a U-turn last year on its plan to liberalize foreign investment in the multi-brand retail sector.

Long-promised liberalization of foreign investment in defense and insurance: stalled. Land acquisition reforms: going nowhere. Overhaul of fuel and fertilizer subsidies that are costing the exchequer dearly: politically unimaginable.


One of the Congress party’s key partners in its ruling coalition, Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee, has blocked attempts at reforms on multiple occasions.

Indeed, the big policy debates of the moment aren’t about whether to push through bold new reforms, but whether to enact retrograde policy initiatives that would impose unprecedented tax liability on foreign investors, such as the measures Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee had to explain in his meeting Wednesday with U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner.

Still, even if the policy paralysis is obvious, Mr. Basu’s comments carry greater weight than any ordinary observer’s, as he’s one of the most important and influential economic policymakers in the government.

Another man in that group, Montek Singh Ahluwalia, deputy chairman of the Planning Commission, said India remains committed to pushing through reforms as it develops its plans for the next five years. “You never finish all the reforms that need to be done,” he said in an interview with the news channel Times Now. “That doesn’t mean you can’t get the economy back on a high growth path.”

But it certainly makes it much harder. Many economists and analysts say India needs big-ticket policy changes if it wants to reach its goal of 9% steady gross domestic product growth. Growth was 6.9% in the year that ended on March 31.

Mr. Basu was in Washington to attend the annual spring meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank. According to a report in the Indian Express newspaper, on Thursday he addressed the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a Washington think tank, and said reforms had slowed because of corruption scandals that have spooked the bureaucracy into not taking risks, rocky coalition politics and other issues.

“We are going through a difficult year,” Mr. Basu said. He also noted there could be a rush of reforms after the 2014 elections.

His point about bureaucrats slowing down decisions is important and often overlooked: the side-effect of the wave of corruption scandals in recent months is that many Indian bureaucrats – even well-meaning ones who have their hands clean – are reluctant to sign a document approving anything significant, lest they be targeted years down the road for a scam that someone above them was carrying out. It’s just safer to pass the “file” to someone else.

The main opposition to the Congress party of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh jumped to highlight Mr. Basu’s claim as though it were a shocking revelation. “This is the state of the economy, this is the state of the economic mess,” Bharatiya Janata Party spokesman Rajiv Pratap Rudy told reporters.

Responding to the BJP, Congress spokesman Manish Tiwari said India has made great progress in the eight years of the Congress-led government’s rule. “Our problem is within. It is with the forces of negativism,” he told reporters.

Shocker: Indian Reforms are Stalled! - India Real Time - WSJ

:tdown:
 
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No thanks to the damn left, mamta and bloody bjp. the congress are cowards, the left, and mamata idiots, and the bjp opposed the nuclear deal, vat, still opposes GST and is blocking reforms to play politics.
If namo is such a reformer, why is the bjp blocking the tax and retail reforms?

I wish some party, I dont care, BJP or Congress gets a majority. Then no alliance and regional parties playing regional politics while stealing at the center(raja, lalu etc etc) and solid reforms that both parties will bring in.
 
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India’s chief economic adviser, Kaushik Basu, told a gathering at a Washington think tank that reforms in India are unlikely to happen until after the next parliamentary elections in 2014.
Thats too early...atleast they should wait for one more year.
 
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We know it already.
There have been no major decisions taken except the FDI in multibrand retail and recent airlines FDI.

The policy paralysis is causing India to lose precious time and money and affecting growth of economy badly.
 
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well this is sad that our politicians are neglecting national interest just to maintain their seat. mamata banerjee is an idiot woman and bjp says it will support but doesnt let it happen easily.
 
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At this stage of development, India with its low base economy should easily be in double-digit growth by now.

But due to policy paralysis (and the Congress party), India is now only growing at 6.1%... with worse data to come when you consider the state of the global economy.

Indians need Narenda Modi as a leader. No one else is strong or capable enough to push through reforms.
 
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At this stage of development, India with its low base economy should easily be in double-digit growth by now.

But due to policy paralysis (and the Congress party), India is now only growing at 6.1%... with worse data to come when you consider the state of the global economy.


welll the growth rate is 7.1 but yes ur right, we r growing slower than we can. india can now grow for 10 yrs for 12%. these reforms will be done but only when economy reaches the climax point. these assholes politicians only wake up when something like 1991 happens.
 
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Here's a NY Times report on India's fuel shortages hurting electricity generation & economy:

India — India has long struggled to provide enough electricity to light its homes and power its industry around the clock. In recent years, the government and private sector sought to change that by building scores of new power plants.

But that campaign is now running into difficulties because the country cannot get enough fuel — principally coal — to run the plants. Clumsy policies, poor management and environmental concerns have hampered the country’s efforts to dig up fuel fast enough to keep up with its growing need for power.

A complex system of subsidies and price controls has limited investment, particularly in resources like coal and natural gas. It has also created anomalies, like retail electricity prices that are lower than the cost of producing power, which lead to big losses at state-owned utilities. An unsettled debate about how much of its forests India should turn over to mining has also limited coal production.

The power sector’s problems have substantially contributed to a second year of slowing economic growth in India, to an estimated 7 percent this year, from nearly 10 percent in 2010. Businesses report that more frequent blackouts have forced them to lower production and spend significantly more on diesel fuel to run backup generators.

The slowdown is palpable at Sowmya Industries, a small company that makes metal shutters that hold wet concrete in place while it solidifies into columns and beams, a crucial tool for the construction industry.

The company, located outside this city on the southeast coast of India, is struggling with several issues, including a 20 percent increase in the price of raw materials and falling orders.

But Sowmya’s manager, R. Narasimha Murthy, said the lack of reliable power was an even bigger problem. His company loses three hours of power every evening. And all day on Wednesdays and Saturdays — euphemistically called “power holidays” — it receives only enough electricity to turn on the lights but not enough to use its large metal-cutting machines.
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A major problem is the anemic production of coal, which provides 55 percent of India’s electricity. Coal production increased just 1 percent last year while power plant capacity jumped 11 percent. Some electricity producers have been importing coal, but that option has become more untenable recently because India’s biggest supplier, Indonesia, has doubled coal prices.
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For many businesses, the power shortage has become debilitating.

In the southern state of Tamil Nadu, Srihari Balakrishnan, a textile factory owner, said he goes through 6,300 gallons of diesel fuel on an average day to keep his operation running, spending $3,000 more than he would if power were available around the clock.

“We are not able to use 20 to 30 percent of our capacity,” he said. “We can’t use grid power for two full days of the week. When we have power, we have a six-hour cut,” he added, using an Indian term for blackouts.
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Other companies are also stuck. Reliance Power, controlled by the investor Anil Ambani, says it has stopped construction on a large electricity plant nearby because it can no longer afford to buy coal from Indonesia as planned.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/20/b...to-deliver-enough-electricity-for-growth.html
 
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At this stage of development, India with its low base economy should easily be in double-digit growth by now.

But due to policy paralysis (and the Congress party), India is now only growing at 6.1%... with worse data to come when you consider the state of the global economy.

Indians need Narenda Modi as a leader. No one else is strong or capable enough to push through reforms.

Do you think PVN and MMS were "strong" leaders??

Modi is too controversial to do anything meaningful on a national level...........
 
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Do you think PVN and MMS were "strong" leaders??

MMS isn't a leader. He certainly wasn't during the 1990's reforms, and despite being promoted later on, he still is not a leader now. Rather, it is Sonia who pulls the strings.

Singh is a great economic expert, but he doesn't have the force of personality to push through reforms in a way that Modi could.
 
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MMS isn't a leader. He certainly wasn't during the 1990's reforms, and despite being promoted later on, he still is not a leader now. Rather, it is Sonia who pulls the strings.

Singh is a great economic expert, but he doesn't have the force of personality to push through reforms in a way that Modi could.

That was my point...... in 1990s PVN wasn't a "strong" leader either....... Infact, he ran a minority govt and managed to oversee comprehensive economic reforms........ that is what a leader should be....... keep a low profile and get the job done!!

Modi is a lightning rod nothing else
 
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That was my point...... in 1990s PVN wasn't a "strong" leader either....... Infact, he ran a minority govt and managed to oversee comprehensive economic reforms........ that is what a leader should be....... keep a low profile and get the job done!!

Modi is a lightning rod nothing else

Yet he managed to IMPLEMENT nation-wide reforms on such a massive level?

Congress on the other hand, can't even get past their own allies like Mamata, for something as basic as retail FDI. Complete policy paralysis, as the article on the OP demonstrates.
 
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Yet he managed to IMPLEMENT nation-wide reforms on such a massive level?

Congress on the other hand, can't even get past their own allies like Mamata, for something as basic as retail FDI. Complete policy paralysis, as the article on the OP demonstrates.

Who is the "he" you're referring to? I'm lost..........
 
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