Friday, May 27, 2016

Still trying to make money from politics? - Part 4

"The best way to keep your friends is not to give them away."
—Wilson Mizner (American, 1876-1933)
Word for the day
Embonpoint (n)
Excessive plumpness; stoutness.
Malice towards none
Priyanka Chopra could possibly be the first truly global star from Bollywood.
Raj Kapoor, Big B, Rajanikanth, and Khan trio, etc. have been hugely popular, but entirely on the basis of their work in India.
Three cheers for PC!!!
First random thought this morning
In past one year, gold has been one of the best performing asset class. Recently, many experts and analysts have opined that gold might rise 40-50% from the current levels in next 2-3years. Accordingly they have advised higher allocation to this asset class.
I have not understood their rationale completely, but I am inclined to strongly disagree with them on this. I feel gold is a secular sell for next few decades.

Still trying to make money from politics? - Part 4

The political debate post the recently concluded assembly elections is focused on two things:
(a)   BJP is growing exclusively at the expense of Congress Party, as it is doing well only in the states where it is in direct contest with the Congress Party. The states where it contests against one or more regional parties, it's performance is no great.
(b)   Regional parties are becoming stronger with each passing election and a coalition of these parties could pose a strong challenge to the surging BJP.
I find both these narratives suffering from a high degree of prejudice and bit shortsighted.
Firstly, the swell in the ranks of BJP should be judged from the recent context, which is very different from the context of early 1990s. Regardless of the media projections, BJP is no longer a extreme right wing ultra nationalist party. It is as close to the center of the ideological spectrum as Congress has traditionally been. The only difference could perhaps be that the Congress approached the center from the left side and BJP is approaching the center from the right side.
So in effect BJP has acquired the substantial undertaking of the Congress Party. Terming BJP's rise as rise of Hindu nationalism, or outcome of the consolidation of votes on religious lines, to my mind, is preposterous.
The rise of BJP is purely due to learning from the mistakes of Congress Party and transforming itself it into a cleansed form of the Congress. For example consider the following:
(a)   BJP promoted strong regional leaderships which Congress did not do in past four decades. Shivraj Singh, Raman Singh, Narendra Modi, Manohar Parrikar, Rajnath Singh, Vasundhra Raje etc. are some example. So in effect there are many strong regional outfits within BJP.
(b)   Wherever, it did not have enough regional strength it has forged alliances with regional parties, like SAD, PDP, SS, AGP, TDP, JMM, JDU, INLD etc. But unlike Congress, it did not stop just at forging alliances. It continued to strengthen its position to outdo the alliance partner. SS, JMM and AGP are already junior partners of BJP. INLD and JDU are not much stronger either. SAD may face the heat next.
(c)    BJP projected successfully itself as a party where all have equal chance of rising to the top. Modi, Fadnavis, Khattar, Sonawal are examples. This has motivated lot of youth to join the party. No one has any motivation to join Congress today.
(d)   BJP has not tried to change the economic agenda set by the Congress party in early 1990s and followed by all successive governments. It is just focusing on the execution, something UPA governments failed at.
...to continue next week

Thursday, May 26, 2016

Still trying to make money from politics? - Part 3


"There is something about a closet that makes a skeleton terribly restless."
—Wilson Mizner (American, 1876-1933)
Word for the day
Trophic (adj)
Of or relating to nutrition; concerned in nutritive processes.
Malice towards none
Is there any study to assess the impact of CSE & Baba Ramdev's persistent and virulent attacks on growth of aerated drinks' consumption in India?
First random thought this morning
Despite disconcerting headlines about IS, Taliban, North Korea, Syria & China sea, the world today is definitely more peaceful than at least ever in past 2000years.
This peace might be one of the reasons for the economic growth challenges the world is facing these days. Poor demography, innovation mostly focused on consumption (applied sciences) rather than development (pure sciences), little motivation to save for difficult times and monetary policies favoring leveraged consumption.
Since most modern economic and political theories are outcome of war, we may need a serious reset in economic, strategic and political thought process to get out of the rut.

Still trying to make money from politics? - Part 3

I find the political debate in the country totally confused. In fact, the confusion is compounding after each election, even be it a by-election in 10 odd municipal wards in Delhi.
The political pundits and studio experts (some of whom might have never visited a polling booth) are suggesting that Indian elections are fast becoming personality driven rather than policy driven! Nothing could be far from the truth.
The fact is that Indian political system is designed to be personality driven rather than policy driven. The diversity and inherent contradictions of Indian nation state make sure that it is almost impossible to evolve a National Policy on virtually anything, e.g., agriculture, water, education, social entitlements, equality, etc. Even the foreign policy has its own dissenters, e.g., TN on Sri Lanka policy, West Bengal & Assam on Bangladesh policy, J&K on Pakistan policy, Bihar on Nepal policy, left parties on China & US policies etc.
The Indian democracy has always remained intertwined with traditional beliefs (King is God's representative) and feudal dominance. Nehru ruled India almost unchallenged, trampling the dissenting voices of Lohia, Kriplani, Karpuri Thakur, Shyama Prasad, etc.. Mrs. Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi also ruled authoritatively, in their own individual name, stifling any dissenting voices within and outside the party, notably Jaiprakash Narayan, Morarji Desai, V. P. Singh, Kamalpati Tripathi, Arun Nehru etc.
P. V. Narasimha Rao vs. L. K. Advani, A. B. Vajpayee vs. Sonia Gandhi, Manmohan Singh vs. L. K. Advani, Rahul Gandhi vs. Narendra Modi have all been famous personality driven contests in past two decades. At regional level also Mulayam vs. Mayawati, Karunanidhi vs. MGR/Jayalalitha, Devi Lal vs. Bhajan Lal, Jyoti Basu vs. S. S. Ray, Lalu Yadav vs. Nitish Kumar contests have been part of the political folklore.
V. P. Singh, N. D. Tiwari, Kamraj, NT Rama Rao, Chandrababu Naidu, Jyoti Basu, Karpuri Thakur, Lalu Yadav, Mulayam Singh, Sharad Pawar, Deve Goda, Karunanidhi, Jayalalitha, Farooq Abdullah, P. S., Badal, Devi Lal, Mamta Banerjee, V. C. Shukla, Narendra Modi, Madhavrao Scindhia, etc. have all been strong regional satraps having exercised substantial influence on the national politics. One should not forget that BJP is also recognized by its regional satraps in MP, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Rajasthan, etc.
While there is no dearth of floaters like Ramvilas Paswan, Ajit Singh and Maneka Gandhi who have been part of most political combinations, which have governed the country in past 25years; there are many others who have experimented joining hands with ideological rivals - Jan Sangh with socialists in 1977, BJP with V. P. Singh in 1989, Kalyan Singh with Mulayam and Mayawati in UP, Nitish with Lalu in Bihar in 2015, Communists with Congress in UPA-1 and recent assembly polls, BJP with PDP & NC in NDA -1 and recent assembly elections.
My point therefore is that in Indian context there is not much to discuss or bother about political parties and party ideologies. It's the people only who matter............to continue

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Still trying to make money from politics? - Part 2

"Don't talk about yourself; it will be done when you leave."
—Wilson Mizner (American, 1876-1933)
Word for the day
Gaucherie (n)
Lack of social grace, sensitivity, or acuteness; awkwardness; crudeness; tactlessness.
Malice towards none
Could Iran emerge as new favorite destination of Indian tourists who have made enough rounds of Dubai and Phuket?
First random thought this morning
Digvijay Singh is a master strategist. He has always been successful in deflecting the attacks on the Congress leadership by trivializing the debate. For instance, in the current episode, people are discussing nuances of cardiac surgery vs. cosmetic surgery rather than seeking accountability of the Congress leadership towards millions of voters who have traditionally voted for them. No one is even asking the Congress Party to make the reports of various committees on previous election debacles public along with the action taken on such reports.
Only Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal can match the strategic skills of Diggi Raja.

Still trying to make money from politics? - Part 2

Though in principle I strongly believe that politics of the day has little influence on the financial markets in the medium to long term, it does cause short term volatility.
The market participants from my generation would remember the kind of Euphoria caused by the "Dream Budget" of 1997 presented by P. Chidambaram. The market and industry were ecstatic over the new bottle which was half full with country liquor (no wine). The proposed financial sector reforms (Narsimham 2.0) and tax reforms (Chelliah 2.0) lacked any innovation and political commitment. Nifty which rose from 997 to 1252 after the 1997 budget fell 10% by the end of 1998. Similarly, the fabled reformist NDA I government 1999-2004, saw Nifty rising by just 10% over October 1999 to May 2004 period.
Anyone who tried to make money from political developments in this period lost heavily. Particularly, people who bought disinvestment stories in NDA-I regime and random NBFCs in UF regime.
On the contrary, Nifty rose from 390 to 1100 in five year regime of PV Narasimha Rao. Reeling under the shocks of Harshad Mehta scam and subsequent market crash, no one believed in that rally and very few participated in 2.5x upside. The Modi wave in the market has also subsided. I do not hear many claims of making a kill in this wave, either.
The point is that any attempt to make profit from political developments, in India context especially, is mostly futile. Like buying railway vendors ahead of Rail Budget and fertilizer stocks ahead of monsoon forecast, it could be an entertaining show. But it rarely helps making any significant gains.
As I have been reiterating rather frequently, that the governments in past 25years have mostly adopted similar socio-economic policies consistently irrespective of their form or constitution.
For example consider the following:
1.    The process of meaningful tax reforms was started by the then finance minister V. P. Singh (Congress 1984-89) by rationalizing the tax slabs, lowering maximum marginal tax rates substantially, rationalizing wealth tax and introducing CENVAT. The recommendations of Raja J. Chelliah Committee (1991-93) on tax reforms constituted by the government (Congress 1991-96) have since formed the basis of tax reforms in India. All successive governments have implemented these recommendations. No government has sought to reverse or alter the process started by Congress government (1984-89). These recommendations formed the core of the now discarded Direct Tax Code. The origin of the tax proposal like lower tax rate with lesser exemptions and no wealth tax could also be traced to that.
Committees formed under the chairmanship of other members of Raja Chelliah committee like Govinda Rao, Partha Shome and Vijay kelkar etc. subsequently updated the recommendations to provide further impetus to the entire process of tax reforms in the country.
It was the Finance Minister of H. D. Devegoda led United Front government who presented the most talked about "dream budget".
2.    The recommendations of Narsimham Committee (1991-92) appointed by Dr. Manmohan Singh, the then finance minister in the Congress government, have largely formed the basis of financial and banking sector reforms in the country. Most successive governments have implemented the recommendations consistently. In fact, P. Chidambram, the then finance minister in United Front government (1998) had re-appointed the Narsimham Committee to make recommendations about the second generation banking sector reforms. The report was submitted in 1999 to the NDA government which accepted the recommendations. However, almost all governments have failed in building wider consensus on these recommendations and have failed to implement many of them. But acceptance and rejection has been very consistence irrespective of the form and constitution of government.
3.    The BJP led NDA government enacted the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act (FRBMA) in 2003. The arch rival Congress led UPA-I government implemented the same in 2004 in letter and spirit. This still forms the very basic of fiscal discipline both at central and state levels, though implementation was suspended in 2009 in the wake of global crisis and need for stimulus. In FY13 stimulus withdrawal commenced. The incumbent Finance Minister has committed to achieve the targets in next three years.
4.    The minority government of Chandrashekhar introduced disinvestment policy first time in 1991. Every successive government since then has not only accepted the policy in principle but also tried to actively integrate into the evolving economic model. Almost all of them have consistently failed in implementing the policy in right spirit.
5.    The then Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee sought to implement GAAR or general anti tax avoidance rules. However, he had to defer the implementation due to concerns expressed by foreign investors and businesses. Both the successive finance ministers have kicked the can a little further.
6.    Single national market (GST) is also an idea whose time has come. The incumbent government is poised to implement the legislation framed by the previous government.
7.    Programs such as cleaning the holy rivers of Ganga & Yamuna and provision of toilets in every home have been accorded priority by all successive governments. Millions have been spent on these programs with no evident results. The incumbent government has adopted the program on mission basis. The execution could make a difference.
From the above cited example, it is evident clear that the direction of policy has been mostly same on most accounts during the past three decades. The difference lies in the execution.
The incumbent government has taken a number of steps to improve the execution of key policies and programs. The outcome will decide whether the things are being done differently!
It is however important to note that the P. V. Narasimha Rao led Congress government and Atal Bihari Vajpayee led NDA government made many historic departure from the past and took many new policy initiatives.
The end of Nehru era's license, quota & permit raj, abolition of capital controls and introduction of LERMS, entry of private players in civil aviation, opening of financial sector, etc. were some major path breaking reforms introduced by P. V. Narasimha Rao government.
Divestment of major government monopolies like power, roads, wireless communication, ports, airports, insurance & hydrocarbons, focus on rural connectivity, deregulation of fuel pricing, and liberal FDI regime were the key new policy initiatives during the Vajpayee led NDA regime.
The 10years of UPA regime did not witness any major policy departure. The execution of existing policy norm was poor.
The dominance of market economists (against development & social economists before) in the consultative bodies of the incumbent government suggests that we might see a new policy paradigm in next four years. However, in past 2years of PM Modi led NDA we have not seen any major policy departure, except dismantling of 6 decade old Planning Commission.
We have though seen many administrative corrections that are apparently leading to much better execution. The communication with markets and people has also improved materially.
But anyone who did bet on immediate cyclical recovery and bought cyclical stocks in summer of 2014 might not be a happy person today, two years down the line.
Many people have asked about my comments on the current political scenario and its implications on financial markets.
This post has become unusually lengthy and repetitive. I would discuss my views on this later in the week.

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Still trying to make money from politics?

"A fellow who is always declaring he's no fool usually has his suspicions."
—Wilson Mizner (American, 1876-1933)
Word for the day
Panjandrum (n)
A self-important or pretentious official.
Malice towards none
These days in media promotion, the slimming products and services are sharing equal space with weight gaining and body shaping products and services.
Perhaps Size Zero fad is dissipating. What else will change with this?
First random thought this morning
With successful test launch of RLV-TD India moved an inch further in establishing itself as a lowest cost space service provider. In 10-15 years ISRO could be the real money spinner for the government. Deal with Iran on Chabahar port may open many Central Asian doors for India.
US Congress has blocked US$450mn aide to Pakistan over non-compliance on anti-terrorism pledge. US forces also violated Pak's sovereignty by launching yet another attack on its territory.
Can we say that Indian foreign policy is out of historical Indo-Pak muck and India is moving on fast become a relevant global player.

Still trying to make money from politics?

The stock prices of two Tamil Nadu based media groups, publically known to have affinity to rival political parties, oscillated widely during last week. Making mockery of the whole democratic process, probity in public life, and governance standards - traders, investors and fund managers rushed to buy the stock "believed" to be benefitting from patronage of the winning party.
It is for the enforcement agencies, CAG, regulators and judiciary to scrutinize whether the incumbent governments in Tamil Nadu (and elsewhere for that matter) do actually favor a particular media group (or any other business group for that matter) in the business of the government or it is just a matter of public perception.
However, purely from investment strategy viewpoint I find the behavior of traders, investors and fund managers strange and suffering from a poor gambling instinct. If someone wishes to disagree he may note the following:
The shares of Sun TV listed in April 2006 and the listing day closing was 366 (adjusted for Bonus in 2007), not very different from the closing price of yesterday. The party supposedly patronizing the company was part of the Central Government during 2004-2014.
The shares of Raj TV listed in March 2007 and closed at Rs56.50 on the listing day (adjusted for bonus in 2014), a return of 2.44% CAGR over 9years, when the party supposedly favoring the stock has been in power since 2006.
The point I want to reiterate is that policy making in India has mostly been supportive of financial markets in past 25years; regardless of the Form (single party majority, single party minority, or multi party coalition) and the Constitution (Only Centrist, Centrist with Left, Centrist with Socialists, Right with Socialists, and Rightist) of the government.
The trajectory of economic growth has mostly been a factor of usual economic cycles and global liquidity & credit availability. Since opening of the economy in early 1990s, barring small bouts of policy (fiscal and/or monetary) stimulated higher growth, the growth has been mostly below "potential", casting valid doubt over the judgment of the "potential" itself.
The leadership's commitment to the execution has made some difference to the trajectory of the economic growth, but the impact has mostly been neutralized by overall poor governance standards and failures on the inclusion front.
Historically I have avoided participation in the debates over policy issues like WTO, VAT, FDI, GST, DTAA, GAAR etc., as I firmly believe that in a democracy no one can stop an idea whose time has come, and vice versa no one can implement an idea whose time has not yet come.
FDI in insurance & pension saw many parliament session getting disturbed. I didn't hear any voice of protest when it was implemented. Like GST, VAT was also resisted vociferously but accepted later without a murmur.
....to continue

Monday, May 23, 2016

Nifty: Momentum losing, expect range to narrow further

Thought for the day
"I've spent several years in Hollywood, and I still think the movie heroes are in the audience."
—Wilson Mizner (American, 1876-1933)
Word for the day
Furphy (n)
A false report; rumor.
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
As it turns out, Rahul Gandhi, like her Aunt Meneka, is an intense animal lover.
He refuses to chain his dog, even if it means losing 2-3 state elections!
 
First random thought this morning
In past few years I have noticed that the foreign media is doing mostly Google/telephonic journalism in India, so trusting them is not prudent. The Indian media is so selective, prejudiced and partisan in their reporting that one has to be a really cruel editor to make any sense of their reporting. Social media is over-enthusiastic and often manipulative.
So how do we know what's happening around! I suggest carry your backpacks and travel for three days in general class compartment of Indian railway.
 

Nifty: Momentum losing, expect range to narrow further

Indian markets lost further momentum last week. In its attempt to assimilate the full implications of a myriad of domestic policy decision, political events and global concerns (especially Brexit, Fed hike) the markets oscillated between hope and fear, before ending the week with some losses.
Continued poor show by PSU banks, though not entirely unexpected, impacted the sentiments further.
I do not, see much changes in the market circumstances and behavior this week also. The derivative settlement and some key results may though cause higher intraday volatility.
In strict technical terms, on weekly charts a close below 7730 may confirm a bearish H&S pattern on Nifty charts, that could lead Nifty to fall to 7550-7560 range. On the upside Nifty faces a strong weekly resistance at 7850 level now and presently lacks momentum to cross it decisively. So most likely scenario is Nifty moving in 7550-7860 range, with marginal bearish bias. Nonetheless, if Nifty manages to close above 7830 this week, the bearish bias will get obliterated.
In case of bank Nifty the range could be even narrower at 16300-16800.
 
 

Friday, May 20, 2016

Good days and peaceful nights

"Nature uses only the longest threads to weave her patterns, so that each small piece of her fabric reveals the organization of the entire tapestry."
— Richard P. Feynman (American, 1918-1988)
Word for the day
Jeremiad
A prolonged lamentation or mournful complaint.
Malice towards none
The ignominious decline of communist parties in India, at a time when income inequalities are rising at the fastest pace since independence, and a right wing party is dominating is quite intriguing.
First random thought this morning
Five key takeaways from the recently concluded assembly elections:
(1)   Time is running out faster for Congress than most anticipated. The Congress stands almost no chance in UP, PK or no PK.
(2)   BJP would need to galvanize the UP people on some issue if it wants to unseat SP. Otherwise, Akhilesh is set to come back by default.
(3)   Nitish needed crutches of Lalu and Rahul to retain Bihar. Mamata has done it on her own. She may have better claim on united opposition leadership as compared to Nitish.
(4)   The voters continue to give decisive mandate. The days of fractured mandate are gone.
(5)   BJP might want to go alone in Punjab polls.

Good days and peaceful nights

Many parts of the country are presently experiencing an intense heat wave. The mercury is breaking more records than Virat Kohli. But we have not seen many citizens complaining.
One primary reason is significantly improved electricity supply. Despite sharp rise in electricity demand, the supply has remained stable; grid is working fine; and load shedding hours are much shorter and pre-planned. Many smaller towns in UP, MP, Bihar, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu etc. where 6-10hr load shedding was normal during summers, are facing just 0-4hr of load shedding. Delhi, Haryana, Gujarat and many other states have not reported any scheduled load shedding.
For millions of students, small businessmen, farmers, housewives, and companies making electrical appliances Achhe Din & Raat (Good days and peaceful nights) might have already arrived.
People who did not had sweat for hours every day or stand in the long queues for two litters of kerosene (for lighting) or stay awake the whole nights as their power backups failed to recharge; and the people sitting in swanky TV studios might not feel it, but it certainly is a major relief for millions of people.
The power market in India is almost a buyers' market, much like the telecom and auto. It's different from cement and steel markets, which despite being in oversupply command some pricing power due to cartelization and state protection.
The situation has been fully exploited as an investment theme. All the fruits (low hanging, high hanging and the rotten ones) have been plucked.
The appliance manufacturers who are immediate gainers of better power supply are trading at valuations that would need 5years of exponential demand growth to justify. This market may not run into supply constraints anytime soon as the planned investments more than take care of the likely demand growth. The global capacities are already underutilized. JPY, KRW, CNY devaluation will keep imports competitive for long time.
The power producers, distributors, fuel suppliers and power equipment manufacturers are struggling with surplus capacity, falling regulatory margins; materially lower merchant prices and rising competition. In absence of material pick up in industrial demand, 80-90GW additional capacity, likely to go on stream in next couple of years will only add to the pressure. In my view:
(a)   The appliance demand will explode during FY18-FY21. The high valuation currently enjoyed by the companies may sustain. I may stay invested there,  and even add some more with 3year perspective.
(b)   The power market will come to balance in FY18 as industrial and farm demand picks up and UDAY scheme is fully implemented. I will look at some producers from purely dividend yield perspective.
(c)    Equipment producers I will give a miss, except for technology innovators in T&D automation space.

The collateral benefits of stable and adequate power supply:
(a) Rise in industrial productivity, especially MSME segment.
(b) Rise in household productivity.
(c) Lower household savings as expenditure on consumer durables rises and recurring electricity expense also picks up (much like telecom).
(d) Fiscal comfort as industrial and farm production rises, power subsidies not needed.
 

Thursday, May 19, 2016

You give some to get more

"Europeans are much more serious than we are in America because they think that a good place to discuss intellectual matters is a beer party."
— Richard P. Feynman (American, 1918-1988)
Word for the day
Oenomel (n)
Something combining strength with sweetness.
Malice towards none
The speed with which global auto makers are joining the list of "emission norm cheaters", it would soon cease to be a headline news - and people will stop bothering about it!
First random thought this morning
After Sugar, Urea, Tea, Coal, bauxite, Pulses, spices, etc. India is reportedly also becoming a swing player (consumer/producer) in global crude oil market.
The natural consequence should be development of a strong and vibrant commodities' market. Unfortunately, even the Indian traders prefer Dubai, Singapore and London over Indian cities for carrying their commodity trading activities. The anomaly needs to correct sooner than later.

You give some to get more

Ostensibly, the upper half of the Indian demographic pyramid is not pleased with the performance of the incumbent NDA government.
This is the section of the society which has benefitted most from the globalization of the Indian economy in past 25years. Having grown at a rapid pace in past two decades, this section is also holding very high economic aspirations. Besides, the people in this socio-economic strata are well exposed to the living standards in the developed economies, and in majority cases set up higher benchmark for the quality of life. In their criticism of the government performance they are highly subjective. Much of their frustration could be traced to their personal circumstances, benchmarks and aspirations rather than to the consequences of the underperformance on part of the government.
In my view, the assessment of the government's performance my this upper half suffers from a major lacuna. It completely disregards the fact that in pursuance of 25years of economic, social, political and administrative reforms Indian economy has reached a stage where it has to accelerate and take a big leap, just like an airplane immediately before the take off. A failure here would set us back by 25years.
The government is like pilot of the airplane - it cannot avoid the acceleration, noise, vibration. The best it could do is to make the take off a little less bumpy. The worst it could do it is to abort the flight altogether and return to parking bay. I find the flight presently bumpy but on course.
The upper half of the Indian demographic pyramid needs to accept that, irrespective of the party running the government, it's time for:
·         Better compliance standards
·         Higher tax equity
·         End of feudal lordship over labor
·         Rise in global competition and lower state protection
·         End of crony capitalism and crony socialism
·         End to free resources and capital
These are pre-requisites for attaining higher living standards and meeting their high aspirations.
The bottom half of the Indian society has not moved much in past 25yr, so they do not have much to lose if the flight is aborted.
It is the top half of the pyramid which needs rule of law; less crime; trained and skilled labor; risk capital; best technology; global markets; larger markets for their products, services and ideas; better education and job/business opportunities for their children; and much more.
Trust me, none of these is possible if the changes that are taking place are not allowed to happen.
(Note: A small but highly visible and audible section of this section of the society is left leaning and would not concur with the BJP led government for a variety of reasons - not necessarily economic. Though dominating the media (including social media) space, they are in abysmal minority and do not represent the popular opinion.)

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Times are changing - for good or bad, only time will tell

"I was born not knowing, and have had only a little time to change that here and there."
— Richard P. Feynman (American, 1918-1988)
Word for the day
Quaff (v)
To drink a beverage, especially an intoxicating one, copiously and with hearty enjoyment.
Malice towards none
Congress celebrating Delhi municipal by-polls victory (4 out of 13) as if they have destroyed AAP and BJP completely.
First random thought this morning
Shiela Dixit and Tarun Gogoi served three consecutive terms as CM of their respective states. Ms. Dixit is already out of power. Mr. Gogoi is indicated to be going out. Given the state of affairs in the Congress Party, these leaders may not come back to power anytime soon.
Others who are serving third term are Shivraj Singh Chouhan and Raman Singh. They need to be extremely careful. A win will bring them in the league of invincible Jyoti Basu, Manik Sarkar, Pawan Chamling, & Naveen Patnaik, whereas a loss might severely dent their political career.

Times are changing - for good or bad, only time will tell

As the incumbent government completes 2years in power, a debate is raging whether it had been able to deliver on its electoral promises. The negative argument sounds mostly rhetoric and politically motivated. The positive argument too suffers from seeing little further from the present.
In my view, normalized for the impact of adverse weather conditions (severe drought and surprise floods) in past 2yrs, legacy fiscal constraints, export demand contraction due to global slowdown, and benefits of lower energy prices - the government has performed reasonably well on the economic front. The failings could be counted mostly on social front.
The government has managed the fiscal conditions very well despite socio-political compulsions. Prudent and frequent hikes in duties on fuel, despite severe criticism and political reverses in Delhi & Bihar, is just one example.
Improving systemic efficiencies through better use of technology and close monitoring from the top is also showing result in project execution especially logistics, power and financial sector.
One of the best performance has been in the area of image building. PM himself has executed the task of improving India's global image as attractive investment destination. The marketing exercise has been duly backed by significant legislative, legal and administrative provisions. The rules for foreign investments have been modified keeping in view the long term goals of making India a preferred destination for long term productive investment and not just a trading & arbitrage centre.
The government led by BJP has been able to successfully keep their party's economic ideas (mostly based on nationalistic self reliance) at arm's length, and maintain consistency in economic policies. Belying all fears of major disruptions in economic policy under influence of right wing ideologues. At the same time it has encouraged domestic enterprise to become competitive enough to take on global leaders. Patanjali is just one case in point. The domestic defense manufacturing sector might see some global size players in next 10-15years.
Moving away from traditional populism like loan waiver and unproductive stipend to help rural economy, the government has for the first time introduced some structural changes like comprehensive crop insurance and soil health card etc. Better communication through DD Kisan channel is also being appreciated widely. Better water management is a work in progress, but progressing well in right direction.
The government has struck some decisive blows to the parallel economy, breaking the nexus between scrupulous businessmen and politicians. The immediate impact is slowdown in business, but the long term benefits will be immense.
Achhe din (good times) might be an election slogan. The government might seem working against the interest of middle class (BJP's traditional core vote bank) but that may not be true...........to continue