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The
Daily Reckoning PRESENTS:
The emergence of India as an economic force, along with China, is one of
the biggest stories on the investment landscape in recent times. And
like China, India's success has come despite massive head winds. But is
now the time to invest? Chris Mayer explores…
I
recently finished a good book on India, one of the best I've read about
the country. Edward Luce is the author of In Spite of the Gods: The
Strange Rise of Modern India. He was the South Asia bureau chief for the
Financial Times, living in New Delhi from 2001- 2006.
It
seems Luce traveled everywhere in India, meeting with local officials,
business people, journalists and more. This is the kind of research I
put a high value on. There are things you learn by being in a place that
you simply can't from afar.
The
portrait that emerges from Luce's work is one of incredible complexity,
color and contradiction. Many of the stereotypes you might have about
India only deepen, while others explode in the face of contrary
evidence.
For
an example of deepening stereotypes, take the tangled and corrupt Indian
bureaucracy. Its army of workers is immune to dismissal. Corruption is
rampant and widely accepted in a way strange to Western eyes. This leads
to some absurd circumstances. The highway department in India, for
instance, employs 1.25 people per mile of road, the highest number in
the world. The government pays them more than
three
times the market rate for such labor. "Many of these employees do
not bother showing up for work," Luce writes, "because they
cannot be sacked."
Many
of India's roads are terrible. Seldom can you go more than 40 miles an
hour, even on highways. Traffic switches lanes unpredictably and
absurdly. Luce writes of driving in a highway lane and having other cars
come at him from the opposite direction. Then there are the ox carts and
bicycles and the traffic laws that no one enforces.
The
Indian bureaucracy is as expensive as it is useless. Much of the
government's spending is tied up in paying itself. Salaries for its
bloated payroll soak up money that could have gone to building better
roads, power systems and water and wastewater plants. Of course, all of
these government employees have cushy pensions.
The
legal system is also a mess. Widespread corruption is one issue. It is
so open that some judges have a menu of fixed prices. Luce writes:
"You pay x thousand rupees to get bail if you are standing trial
for a narcotics offense, y thousand for manslaughter…" Then there
are lots of vacancies and the fact that judges don't work much - maybe
from 10 to 3, with at least an hour for lunch. "Perhaps the biggest
problem," Luce writes, "is the gigantic backlog of suits in
India, which in 2006 amounted to 27 million cases. At the current rate
at which India's courts wade through proceedings, it would take more
than 300 years to clear the judicial backlog." By some estimates,
10% of the economy's capital is tied up in legal disputes.
Suffice
to say, this is a deep-rooted problem. I can only imagine the
frustration of tryingto do business there. (One memorable quote from the
head of Proctor & Gamble's India operations: "In my 30 years in
active business in India, I did not meet a single bureaucrat who really
understood my business, yet he had the power to ruin it.")
The
social problems chronicled in the book are alarming, too. This is
another area where stereotypes deepen by reading the book. The old caste
system is depressing in its inhumanity. You'll also see the violence of
religious strife and stark portraits of extreme poverty.
But
the book also explodes stereotypes of India. The big one here is the
economy itself, which is peculiar and complex and not what most
investors think of when they think of India.
When
thinking of India's economy, most investors probably associate it with
its outsourcing companies - India as the world's back office, with call
centers and armies of computer programmers and engineers. But as Luce
makes clear, this part of the economy is still tiny, and much of India's
strange economy is poor and backward.
"Fewer
than 1 million - that is, less than a quarter of 1% of India's total
labor pool - are employed in information technology, software,
back-office processing and call centers," Luce writes. Most Indians
work in an unorganized and primitive economy, working on farms, running
small shops or street stalls, driving rickshaws, working as servants,
serving as seasonal laborers and other tasks. More people work for the
government (21 million) than in India's private organized sector (14
million).
There
is a long way to go in India… which is, oddly enough, part of its
great appeal to investors and businesses.
The
Indian "middle class," depending on how it is measured, is
between 50-300 million people - which alone is larger than the
populations of entire Western countries. Then there is brisk economic
growth - 9% last year. For these reasons, a long list of companies
continues to try to crack the market. AIG, Citibank, Pepsi and many
others have already become market leaders in their segments in India.
Many more are trying to gain a foothold.
"During
my time in India," Luce reflects, "I have often been amused by
the foreign executives I have met who spend years occupying the same
hotel rooms while they await the green light for their company to invest
in India so they can set up a permanent office."
If
you're interested in more on-the-ground reportage on India, I recommend
Luce's book. Since the book's publication, a couple of events stand out
as interesting landfalls marking India's continued ascent.
There
is, for one, India regaining investment-grade status after a 15-year
hiatus as the big ratings agencies removed the speculative tag from
India's debt. This is important, as it will lower the cost of borrowing
for many Indian companies.
Then,
probably more importantly, there is Tata Steel's big acquisition of
Corus, its Anglo-Dutch peer - the first large acquisition by an Indian
company. It has brought out a certain boldness in India's corporate
culture. As one leading Indian commentator put it: "I look forward
to the day when ICICI Bank takes over Citibank; when Infosys acquires
IBM; when Reliance takes over Exxon; and Tata Motors takes over General
Motors." Will the Tata Steel acquisition be something future
historians muse over as a harbinger of
a new
trend, or will it be but a footnote?
Plenty
of head winds remain. According to the World Bank, the average Indian
manufacturing firm loses 8% of sales per year due to power outages.
Roads are still lousy. India, like China, is a voracious consumer of
energy and raw materials.
Yet
such head winds also create opportunity. The daunting prospect of
feeding India's economy bodes well for investors in energy and in all of
the components of infrastructure. India currently imports 70% of its oil
needs, for example, compared with only 30% a year ago.
So
should we buy today?
One
day, India will be cheap again - and worth a bet. Don't forget last
year's nasty sell- off in May and June, when India's markets lost a
third of their value. In retrospect, that was a great buying
opportunity.
Regards,
Chris
Mayer
for The Daily Reckoning

© 2007 Chris Mayer
The
Daily Reckoning Archives
www.dailyreckoning.com
Editor’s Note: Chris
Mayer is a veteran of the banking industry, specifically in the area of
corporate lending. A financial writer since 1998, Mr. Mayer’s essays
have appeared in a wide variety of publications, from the Mises.org
Daily Article series to here in The Daily Reckoning. He is the editor of
Mayer’s Special Situations and Capital and Crisis - formerly the Fleet
Street Letter.
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