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India’s impossible inflation

5:09 pm in business by wbhawkins

Indian Money

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Articles like this warm my business soul. Through some simple use of ubiquitous technology in India, the mobile phone, farmers, producers consumers can benefit from the real advantages of the internet, namely information and distribution, and cut out the middlemen who are taking them for a ride and driving the country’s inflation through the roof. Read this article to understand why. I think my children should learn Hindi, at least, at school if they want to prosper in the future, if the rise of the Indian economy carries on like this.


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article was written by Suhasini Sakhare, for guardian.co.uk on Wednesday 14th July 2010 14.30 UTC

The Indian economic story has been marked in the last decade by outstanding success. The stock exchanges have outperformed leading indices worldwide, the demographics are favourable and the IT outsourcing sector continues to boom. Inflation presents an aberrant thread running through this story. Aberrant because it works not on the basis of how much money consumers have, but on the basis of how little consumers know.

If we look at the numbers, Indian inflation was historically at its lowest in the last 10 years when the economic boom was at its peak. This year, with growth set at 9.4%, as per the IMF’s 8 July forecast, India will likely suffer from double-digit inflation. By contrast, in 2008, growth was a healthy 9%, while inflation was only 6.4%. A bad monsoon last year has been repeatedly blamed for this upsurge, but grain lies rotting in government warehouses.

India’s problems are unique, because it is possibly the most inefficient market in the world. Two historical phenomena are to blame for this.

First, changes in the Indian economy in the early part of the 20th century led to the value of labour, innovation and management plummeting and the value of capital rising disproportionately high. This imbalance continues to this day. Our employment laws are a joke, our scientists staff the top 40% of Nasa, but research lags at home and corporate governance is in its infancy, to put it politely.

Second, Gandhi’s freedom movement and Nehru’s socialist politics have made profit a dirty word. Although the government’s economic liberalisation efforts helped some, Indian capital still continues to be in the unique position of being both extremely powerful, and strongly despised. This is not a good combination, and as a result corruption flourishes, healthy competition is nipped in the bud and middlemen work at the expense of the disorganised producer and the consumer.

A workable solution to this problem is to empower the consumer with knowledge. In 2002, an Indian conglomerate started an experimental internet portal. This portal worked at bringing transparency to the supply side of Indian commodities. By logging in, farmers could check current prices of commodities, and arrive at a good deal.

It is impossible to adequately convey the importance of this knowledge to a western readership. It can mean the difference between starvation and prosperity. A lack of regulation, entrenched purchasing cartels and chronically low social capital means that if not forced, middlemen will give the worst possible deal to the farmer. On the flipside, if not forced, shopkeepers, grocers and retail outlets will and do give the worst possible deal to the Indian consumer. Commodities are largely unbranded, retail is a “mom and pop” sector and consumers are woefully ill-informed. The consumer purchasing groceries or vegetables simply has to take the word of the vendor that he is paying a fair price.

On 25 June, for example, the price of diesel increased by two rupees in India. Diesel is important because most of our commodities are transported by road in diesel-burning vehicles. A 0.9% increase in inflation in wholesale prices was expected. Prices of commodities have instead gone up within two weeks by 15%. Prices of vegetables have gone up by between 35% and 100%. This is sheer carpetbagging opportunism by retailers.

Experience tells us that were the price of diesel to drop tomorrow, these increases would not be reversed. Price increases in India defy the laws of physics. The trick is to curb the initial upswing itself. Much like the portal for farmers, we need an internet portal for the Indian consumer as well: one that allows retailers and grocers to text in prices they can offer for unbranded commodities and vegetables, and arranges these prices by city/town and by five-mile areas within cities. This portal would need to be designed to be lightweight, so that it is accessible to the many Indian consumers with low internet bandwidth, and it should also be able to respond by text message to standard price enquiries by consumers.

A consumer setting out for his monthly grocery shop will check and home in on the shop offering the best deal, within his five-mile radius. Similarly, the weekly vegetable shopping trip could become less uncertain. Such a portal would allow true competition to flourish and would reduce opportunism. It would not be difficult to administer in a country where nearly every urban adult has a mobile and where chip-makers run text-based competitions more complex than this.

• This article was amended on the 14 July at 18.30

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

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Tags: Article, business, Comment, Comment is free, economics, Global economy, India, Suhasini Sakhare

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UK GDP since 1948

5:20 pm in business, credit crunch by wbhawkins

Experiences from bank runs during the Great De...
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Uncannily, I wrote an earlier post based upon the blog of Umair Haque about how we think about the economy than along comes an article in The Guardian illustrating how we have always measured the economy – GDP. It’s still an interesting set of figures presented in a chart to show just how deeply in the mire we are.

Figures and charts can often put into context what headlines cannot. We really are in the mire, but it has been worse. Not that that is much comfort if you have lost your job or your business.


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article was written by Simon Rogers, for guardian.co.uk on Tuesday 27th July 2010 15.25 UTC

The Office of National Statistics announced on Friday that GDP increased by 1.1% in the second quarter of 2010, a much steeper rise than expected.

The announcement follows on from newly revised GDP figures which showed the recession was more severe than first thought. The ONS data revealed that the negative growth experienced in 2008-09 was the worst since the Great Depression of the 1930s, with a decline in GDP of 6.4% rather than 6.2%.

The data below shows what GDP is in actual cash, ie what it was that year not adjusted for inflation. We’ve also added in total inflation-adjusted figures and per capita inflation adjusted figures. Download the spreadsheet to see more data by year or by quarter. A repeated decline in GDP usually means recession.

As several of our posters below have pointed out, there’s more to life than GDP – but here are the latest figures.

Download the full data


DATA: UK GDP since 1948

INTERACTIVE: GDP changes since 1955, %

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guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

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Tags: Article, Blogposts, business, Datablog, Economic growth (GDP), Economic policy, economics, Financial crisis, General election 2010, Government data, Graphic, Office for National Statistics, Quantitative easing, Simon Rogers, UK news

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What Shape Is Your Recession?

11:26 pm in business, marketing by wbhawkins

What's your shape?  

 

 

What's your shape?

Troubled times tend to produce great creativity. Steinbeck’s ‘The Grapes of Wrath’ was set in the dust bowl of the Mid-West as the people moved west in search of work. The early eighties saw the rise of bands in the UK such as ‘The Specials’ whose tracks included ‘Ghost Town’ which portrayed British inner city decline as old industries collapsed and ended generations of working traditions. The Second World War saw the race to nuclear weapons to end the war sooner. Not all of that creativity was good but hard times pushed society and people to change the way it had worked in the past.

The last week has been a revelation on economics for me. I have learnt about ‘Keynes’ and his theories on economics which have come back into favour. ‘Quantitative Easing’ is nothing new except for the description. (If you want to follow a good blog on economics then I suggest following Peter Cannings’ Blog)

The tough times most of us are experiencing now don’t yet appear to have shown signs of great music or innovation which were not already happening before the recession took hold of the world with the exception of the politicians and soothsayers. 

And the politicians, journalists and soothsayers have excelled themselves in describing the recession for the last few weeks. There seems to be a new sport amongst them for describing the ‘shape of the recession.’ Some say the recession will be ‘W-shaped’. For others, it will be ‘V-Shaped’ or ‘L-shaped.’ The best I heard was that it would be ‘bath-shaped.’ 

Britain’s ‘Chancellor of the Exchequer’ revealed his budget last week which revealed more about the recession than any of the ‘shapes’ being conjured up by the soothsayers and politicians. There not so much a ‘shape’ but more of sound as the nation sighed a very long “Oh dear.” The journalists on the BBC’s Radio 4 ‘Today’ program described the budget as “salami-slicing” which was a new but novel description. 

But whatever the politicians and soothsayers predict, or however they describe the recession, it is not them who have to get us out of the mire we are sliding towards. It is you and me that have to prevent ourselves sliding into the swamp. There is no sign of the recession in the small business in which I work with 24 other talented and professional people apart from a determination to work our way past it. We have had more quotes going out to customers and prospects in the last four months of this year than we managed in the last six months of last year. 

It is now that our imaginations are being pushed to work out new ways in which to help our customers. It is now that we see a scramble for people to gain new skills. Our customers want to try things out without expending huge amounts of cash. They are experimenting with ideas that were fads yesterday but now seem to be eminently sensible. Small businesses don’t have the cash to burn on risky projects, but most of people in them will be trying things out to understand how they can be used for their large clients. 

So, the signs of creativity are beginning to show through in the recession. People are looking for value more than five years ago and this is driving creativity. But, as far as my shape for the recession goes, I don’t have the time to ponder upon it. Although, if I was to choose a shape for the recession it would be an ‘X’. ‘X’ marks the spot. The spot where I stop predicting and start doing. That’s the only we can get out of this mess.

Tags: BBC, Bing, business, change, creativity, credit crunch, economics, Five, lists, marketing, radio, recession, risk, skills, small business, technology

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