Walk into any grocery store in a
middle-class neighborhood today and ask the owner what is selling. The answer
is likely to surprise you. Cheaper rice. Loose dal instead of packaged. The
economy brand of oil, not the one they used to buy. In some cases, smaller
quantities of everything.
Now walk into a luxury car showroom in
the same city. Waiting lists. New models selling above sticker price. Customers
paying for options they did not even know existed six months ago.
Both of these things are happening in
India right now. At the same time. In the same cities. And they are not
contradictions — they are two sides of the same economic reality.
The idea that Indian consumers prefer
low prices is not new. It is often described as a cultural trait — as if thrift
were somehow in the national character. That framing is misleading. Indian
consumers are not cheap by nature. They are rational. When budgets are tight,
they make trade-offs. When budgets loosen, they upgrade — fast.
What is happening right now is that
budgets are tight. And for many households, they are tighter than they were
three years ago.
Food prices have risen sharply. A
kilogram of tur dal that cost Rs. 80 a few years ago now costs close to Rs. 160
in many markets. Edible oil prices remain elevated. Wheat flour costs more.
These are not luxuries — they are the building blocks of everyday meals for
most Indian families.
At the same time, wages for a large
portion of the working population have not kept pace. Real wages — what your
salary actually buys after accounting for inflation — have fallen for many
workers in the informal economy. The result is a household that earns roughly
the same in rupees but can buy meaningfully less.
The response is predictable and
rational: buy cheaper. Buy less. Buy local brands instead of national ones.
This is what economists call downtrading, and multiple grocery retailers I
spoke with in recent months confirmed it is happening in staples across the
board — pulses, oils, rice, flour, and even basic hygiene products.
The apparel market tells the same
story. Footfall at economy chains like Zudio and Reliance Trends has risen
noticeably. Budget online platforms like Meesho have grown into very large
businesses by serving exactly this segment of price-pressured shoppers,
primarily in smaller cities and towns.
One honest caveat: my evidence here
is largely qualitative. Retailer conversations, observed footfall, and reported
trends from FMCG companies. Published household consumption data with
sufficient granularity and recency is hard to come by in India. The direction
of the trend feels clear. The precise magnitude is harder to pin down.
Before making the case for polarization,
it is worth pausing on a trend that complicates the story.
Uniqlo and Miniso — Japanese and Korean
retail chains — have found a growing and loyal customer base among younger,
urban Indians over the past few years. Neither is cheap in the way Zudio is
cheap. Neither is premium in the way a luxury brand is premium. They sit in the
middle, and they are doing well.
What they offer is a specific
combination: consistent quality at a price that feels fair. Not the lowest
price. Not an aspirational premium. Just reliable value.
Indian FMCG companies have cracked
versions of this in the past. Some detergent and personal care brands built
large businesses by offering clearly better quality than the cheapest option,
without asking consumers to stretch to a premium price. That formula works —
but it is operationally very hard to sustain, and it requires genuine product
differentiation, not just positioning.
The honest conclusion here is that the
middle is not dead. It is just difficult. Companies that can credibly deliver
quality at a fair price can survive and grow there. Companies that are merely
positioned in the middle — without a real quality advantage — are the ones
getting squeezed. The distinction matters for investors.
At the other end of the market,
something very different is happening. Premium and luxury goods — alcohol,
high-end home fittings, luxury cars, watches, premium apartments — are selling
well. In some categories, they are selling better than ever.
The explanation is straightforward.
Wealth in India has become more concentrated at the top over the past decade. A
relatively small number of households has seen very large gains in income and
asset values. This group can afford — and now routinely buys — things that were
once considered out of reach for all but a handful of Indian consumers.
In volume terms, this group is small.
In value terms, it is large enough to move entire categories. A luxury goods
business that captures even a modest share of this segment can generate
revenues and margins that a mass-market company with ten times the customer
base would struggle to match.
This trend is real and it is likely
durable, for a simple reason: nothing in the near-term policy or economic
outlook suggests a reversal of the wealth concentration that is driving it.
Barring a significant redistribution shock — which is not visible on the
horizon — the premium end of the market will continue to grow.
The uncomfortable corollary: this
trend is a direct product of inequality. The premium boom and the downtrading
squeeze are not separate phenomena. They are two consequences of the same
underlying dynamic — income growth that has been heavily skewed toward the top.
Investors can choose to benefit from this. They should also be clear-eyed about
what they are investing in.
The tendency to choose the lowest price
regardless of quality is not confined to household shopping. It appears to have
taken root in how public money gets spent on infrastructure.
Bridge collapses. Roads that develop
potholes within months of opening. Transformers that fail soon after
installation. These are not one-off accidents. They form a pattern — and the
pattern points toward a procurement system that consistently rewards the lowest
bid, without adequately pricing in quality, durability, or execution risk.
India's public infrastructure tendering
is dominated by L1 — lowest-bidder — frameworks. The political and
administrative logic is understandable: it minimizes the appearance of favoritism
and is easier to defend against audit objections. But the economic outcome is
predictable: contractors win by cutting costs, and quality is often the first
casualty.
For investors in construction and
infrastructure companies, this creates a specific and underappreciated risk.
Companies that depend heavily on public works contracts face perpetual margin
pressure, because winning business requires bidding low. Execution risks are
elevated because their suppliers are also bidding low. And as public scrutiny
of infrastructure quality increases, so does the liability exposure when things
fail.
This is not a reason to avoid the
sector entirely. Some infrastructure businesses are well-insulated: those with
private-sector clients who price for quality, those with long-term annuity
concession models, and those offering specialist technology that faces less
direct price competition. But the broad category of public-works contractors
deserves a harder look than most investors give it.
Let me try to state the investment
implications as plainly as possible.
In the consumer space:
The market is splitting. At the mass
end, volume and distribution are what matter — brands and platforms that can
reach the largest number of price-sensitive buyers efficiently. At the premium
end, pricing power and brand credibility are what matter — businesses that
serve customers who will pay more for something they believe is genuinely
better.
The difficult position is the middle.
Not impossible — as Uniqlo and a handful of Indian FMCG brands demonstrate —
but hard to sustain without a real quality advantage. Mid-market companies that
are positioned in the middle without owning that quality advantage are
vulnerable.
A concrete but incomplete shortlist of
where to look: mass-market FMCG with strong rural distribution; economy retail
formats; budget digital commerce platforms; premium alcohol; high-end home
improvement; wealth management and financial services catering to affluent
households. This is not a buy list — it is a directional filter.
In the infrastructure space:
Be selective. Avoid companies whose
revenues are overwhelmingly dependent on government construction contracts won
through lowest-bid tendering. Prefer companies with private-sector client
exposure, annuity-based revenue models, or genuine technological differentiation.
The risk in public-works contractors is not obvious from their order books — it
shows up in margins, execution delays, and the occasional catastrophic quality
failure.
The downtrading evidence is
qualitative. Retailer conversations and observed footfall are useful signals,
but they are not a substitute for hard data. The direction looks right. The
scale is uncertain.
The bifurcation thesis has
counter-examples. Several respected Indian consumer companies — Titan, Havells,
Asian Paints, Marico — have built enduring businesses in spaces that are
neither pure mass nor pure luxury. They complicate the avoid-the-middle argument
and deserve acknowledgment.
The infrastructure investment call
needs refinement. The sector is large and varied. Painting it with a single
brush is too broad. The caution applies most directly to L1-driven government
contractors. It does not apply equally to the whole sector.
None of these caveats invalidates the
central observation. But they are a reminder that what follows from field
observation and qualitative reasoning is a hypothesis to investigate, not a
conclusion to act on without further work.