Reforms ahem!
There was unprecedented rumble of
benevolence when PM announced the reforms in various sectors.
The govt, long
accused of policy paralysis, started aggressively issuing statements which are
still being debated as being mere announcements or actual reforms.
I’ve tried
to list the reforms below:
·
Proposed FDI of 51% in multi-brand retail
·
Proposed FDI of 49% in aviation
·
Proposed FDI of 49% in pension
Infrastructure:
·
Increase in diesel prices
·
Cut in number of subsidised LPG cylinders
·
Financial restructuring of state electricity distribution
companies
·
Divestment road-map
·
Foreign investment of up to 49% in power trading
exchanges
·
Raising FDI cap in broadcasting from 49% to 74%
Policy Issues:
·
Revised draft of the companies bill
·
Drug pricing policy
·
Clarity on General Anti Avoidance Rule (GAAR)
Pending:
·
DTC (direct tax code)
·
GST (goods and services tax)
(source: value-research
online)
Reforms just don’t happen by a
mere announcement. It all depends whether the govt will actually implement all
that it is making noise over. From both the investors & businessman’s point
of view, it’ll be a long time before any of these announcements attain tangible
form.
I really don’t know why the INR
& stock markets reacted so overwhelmingly on the mere announcements. As
days later nothing much has changed, it’s the same commotion all over. Today
both the INR and the stock markets are spiralling towards their pre-reforms
(announcements) era. Maybe the investors are utter optimists. They see light
even in meagre announcements and hope that something might essentially happen
at the end of it.
The ground realty is still the
same, as discussed in my earlier blogs. There is lack of power, lack of
infrastructure, expensive real estate, lack of skilled labour, lack of public
transport to ferry labour to & from the factories, labour unions which are
hand in glove with local politicians and the list continues. Not to forget that
for any business to start not only umpteen permits are required but the
corruption has to be coped at every step.
A businessman will only start up
a new business or plunge into an already existing one, if he sees that there is
some determination in what govt. has announced. There have to be periods of
sustained policy actions, coupled with alterations in required rules for confidence
to grow for investment. It was a real sham, when the other day Supreme Court had
to remind FEMA to make necessary changes in it's rules, so as to ease FDI in various sectors, as announced by the PM.
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