NY Times May 29, 2012
India’s Economy Slows, With Global Implications
By JIM YARDLEY and VIKAS BAJAJ

NEW DELHI — India’s coalition government just celebrated the third 
anniversary of its tenure with a self-congratulatory banquet that 
could not have been more poorly timed: India’s currency, the 
rupee, is falling; investment is down; inflation is rising; and 
deficits are eating away at government coffers.

While short-term growth has slowed but not ground to a halt, 
India’s problems have dampened hopes that it, along with China and 
other non-Western economies, might help revive the global economy, 
as happened after the 2008 financial crisis. Instead, India is now 
facing a political reckoning, as the country’s elected leaders 
must address difficult, politically unpopular decisions — or risk 
even deeper problems.

“When India was being run comparatively well in 2008, they seemed 
to cope with these external shocks, at least from a financial 
perspective,” said Glenn Levine, a senior economist at Moody’s 
Analytics in Sydney, Australia. “I think people are starting to 
question the long-term Indian story. That is the difference now.”

India’s difficulties come as the global economy is wobbling once 
again. Europe is grappling with a sovereign debt crisis that could 
shatter the continent’s economic and political union. The United 
States is still not producing enough new jobs. China’s growth has 
weakened, with a real estate downturn and stalling exports, while 
important emerging economies like Brazil are slowing down, adding 
to pessimism about the world economy at a critical time.

India is often viewed as a rising global powerhouse and, not too 
long ago, Indian officials were predicting growth rates of 9 
percent or higher. The Obama administration, eager to tap into 
such a booming market and envisioning India as a regional 
counterweight to China, trumpeted the United States-India 
partnership. Some analysts even saw the global downturn as an 
opportunity for India, making it more attractive for foreign 
investors wary of putting money into declining advanced industrial 
countries.

Today, India’s economy is still expanding, with growth projected 
between 6 percent and 7 percent this year. And analysts say 
India’s long-term strengths remain significant. It has one of the 
world’s youngest populations, and polls consistently show they are 
overwhelmingly optimistic about their future. Meanwhile, India’s 
businesses are competing more aggressively on the global stage.

But the slowdown has punctured the once bubbly mood in the 
business and political classes and brought sharp criticism of the 
government. Indian business leaders, foreign investors and 
analysts say India’s strengths are being undermined by growing 
political dysfunction: the populist tendencies of Indian 
politicians, a lack of action by top leaders and allegations of 
corruption that have undermined the authority of policy makers.

India is desperate for investment in mining, roads, ports, urban 
housing and other areas, but Indian businesses and foreign 
investors are starting to shy away. Indian corporations, unable to 
obtain governmental licenses or permissions for projects, are 
investing overseas instead. Foreigners are also pulling back; 
their investment in Indian stocks and bonds totaled only $16 
billion in the last fiscal year, compared with $30 billion the 
year before. The trend accelerated in recent months after the 
Finance Ministry, trying to stem a rising budget deficit, proposed 
a raft of new taxes on foreign institutions doing business in India.

“A quiet crisis of confidence is building up,” said Pratap Bhanu 
Mehta, president of the Center for Policy Research in New Delhi. 
“There is no certainty over the regulatory regime. There is no 
certainty over the tax regime.”

Indians have long thrived amid adversity, often by creatively — at 
times, illegally — subverting onerous regulations with a 
workaround ethos that has spurred economic activity. Even today, 
industries like pharmaceuticals, information technology and 
consumer goods, which do not need many licenses and official 
approvals, are prospering. But those sectors tied to the 
government, including mining, construction and manufacturing, are 
struggling.

“We have consciously kept away from businesses where we would have 
needed lots of permissions,” said Ajay Piramal, who heads a 
Mumbai-based conglomerate focused on pharmaceuticals.

At the core of the political uncertainties is the weakened status 
of the Indian National Congress Party, which leads the coalition 
government, known as the United Progressive Alliance. Since 2004, 
the government has operated under an unorthodox partnership 
between Sonia Gandhi, president of the Congress Party and the 
governing coalition, and Manmohan Singh, her handpicked prime 
minister.

The division of duties worked during the government’s first term. 
Mrs. Gandhi managed the coalition partners, rode herd on the 
Congress Party, championed safety net programs for the poor and 
oversaw election strategy; Mr. Singh, a quiet economist considered 
a father of India’s reform era, moved India closer to the United 
States and oversaw a booming economy where growth topped 9 percent.

In 2009, voters returned the U.P.A. to power amid expectations 
that India, having shrugged off the 2008 global recession, was on 
an inevitably upward growth track. But analysts say the 
contradictions in the Singh-Gandhi partnership have since been 
exposed. Mr. Singh holds the most politically powerful job in the 
country, yet is seemingly reluctant to wield power and often must 
seek approval on policy questions from Mrs. Gandhi. She oversees 
an advisory panel largely consisting of social activists that her 
critics regard as a shadow government.

The result has been a lack of a clear political agenda emanating 
from the top, analysts and business leaders say, allowing the 
bureaucracy to fall back into its traditional resistance to making 
decisions. When officials do act, they often change course after 
encountering political opposition.

“The last year was wasted,” said Sanjaya Baru, a former spokesman 
for the prime minister who is now at a research institute. “We’ve 
had a crisis of leadership on the economic side.”

Moreover, the government has been on the defensive since a series 
of corruption scandals, dormant for several years, exploded into 
public view. Attempts by technocrats to push through a so-called 
“second generation” of deeper economic changes were undermined by 
the inability of the Congress Party to corral its coalition partners.

In December, Mr. Singh’s cabinet announced that foreign retailers 
like Walmart would be allowed for the first time to open stores in 
the country with local partners. But Mr. Singh was forced to 
reverse course after an ally, Mamata Banerjee, the chief minister 
of the state of West Bengal, balked and threatened to bring down 
the government.

Then in March, facing pressures to raise revenues and stem the 
rising fiscal deficit, Pranab Mukherjee, the finance minister, 
released a budget that proposed new taxes on foreign entities in 
India, including levies on past deals that the Indian Supreme 
Court had ruled were not taxable in the country. Foreign investors 
were stunned, and analysts say the outflow of capital is one 
reason the rupee has tumbled 13 percent since the end of February.

“We are fed up and our investors are not keen to even talk about 
India,” said a senior executive at an American bank in Mumbai, 
asking not to be identified so he could speak bluntly. “They are 
sick and tired.”

Kaushik Basu, the government’s chief economic adviser, 
acknowledged that the government had made mistakes and had missed 
opportunities to better position India as the global economic 
landscape shifts. Yet he said that the rising pessimism was 
unwarranted and that India was still growing, still had high 
investment and savings rates, and should take advantage of the 
depreciation of the rupee to push exports. He said India’s 
problems were no worse than those in other emerging economies.

“It is a difficult stage,” Mr. Basu said in an interview. “But I 
do remain very, very optimistic. Six months and we will pull up.”

In the meantime, the immediate challenges are piling up. This 
month, in a move to raise revenues, the government raised gasoline 
prices, drawing public fury. Now the question, analysts say, is 
whether the administration can muster the political courage to 
trim the bigger subsidies affecting diesel fuel and cooking gas.

Mr. Singh warned last week that the government would have to make 
some unpopular decisions. Many experts, however, say they expect 
more stalemate.

“It has always been tough,” said Mr. Levine, the Moody’s 
economist, “but there is a sense, at the moment, that it’s too 
difficult. For the time being people are just giving up on it.”

Jim Yardley reported from New Delhi, and Vikas Bajaj from Mumbai, 
India.
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