Analysing Economic Slowdown - Part 1
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Transcript Analysing Economic Slowdown - Part 1
Analyzing the Indian Economic
Slowdown
Part I
- A presentation to NMCCA
Vikram M Sampat
Reliance Industries Ltd.
August 19, 2012
Navi Mumbai
Analyzing the Indian Economic Slowdown
Background
Advantage India…..
Areas for improvement…..
Conclusions
Background
What is a slowdown?
India – Historic GDP growth trends
Global perspective
Current trends
What is slowdown?
Significant reduction in rate of GDP growth
GDP growth remains positive
Slowdown is not a recession
Employment and productivity may decline
Is India experiencing a slowdown?
Indian slowdown?
Falling GDP growth – 5.3% is the lowest rate in 7 years
Indian economy : Believed to be in slowdown
India – Historic GDP trends
8
6.7
7
6
5
4
First 3 phases relate to
socialist India
4.6
4.1
3.1
3
2
1
0
1951-65
1965-81
1981-88
1988-2011
Phase 1
Phase 2
Phase 3
Phase 4
Source: www.rbi.org, Aravind Panagaria
4 phases of economic growth
identified
Period up to 1970s
characterized by Hindu rate of
growth
Economic liberalization post
1985 brought about a shift in
economic growth
Significant growth impetus post 1988
1988 – 2011 : Economic performance
10
8.9
9
7.7
8
7
6.8
6.3
6
GDP growth broke past
trends post 1988
5.2
5
4
4
Liberalization started by
Rajiv Gandhi & Narsimha
Rao Govts.
2003-2008 : Highlight years
with highest growth
3
2
1
0
1988-90
1990-93
1993-97 1997-2003 2003-08
Source: www.rbi.org, Aravind Panagaria
2008-11
Widely believed to be a new
level of growth
Growth has slowed down
marginally since then
Was 2003-08 a break from trend or a new trend?
Global Perspective - GDP trends
Strong global economy over 20
years.
Past 5 years have seen
exceptional growth
Robust economic growth
US has witnessed stable growth
Low inflation rate
Falling growth rate in Euro area
Low real interest rate
Strong performance from Asia
2003-08 - A golden period
8
US Unemployment – Jobless recovery
Unemployment
rate, %
Technology
boom
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics
Despite strong performance, jobs return slowly
Unemployment – A structural problem?
Population Profile
US has moved to a developed market age profile
Trouble makers : Interest rates
Loose monetary policy for too long after 2001 recession
US Fed was the big culprit with one year at 1%
Allowed excessive liquidity build-up through borrowings
US monetary policy tightening was very sluggish between 2004-06
Source: Tuatara Management Limited, 4 July 2008
Policy decision to maintain low interest rates…..
11
Trouble makers : US savings
Was the US consuming
too much?
Source: US Dept of Commerce
So was the developed world
… led to unusually high consumption in developed world
Trouble makers : US reserves
Excessive US current account
deficits
US Financing itself through
emerging market reserves
… with excessive reliance on deficits and borrowings
13
Assets securitization
CDOs used to keep exposures off balance sheets
Greatly enhanced secondary markets for loans
Provided 20-30% of Inv. banks profits before the meltdown
Banks and rating agencies failed to adequately scrutinize borrowers
but escaped responsibility for defaults
… and “innovative” financing to keep the show going
Derivatives - CDS
Measures health of CDS dealers
Started as an insurance
At peak volume outstanding of $62 trillion, CDS volumes much higher than
underlying bonds issues
Cos like AIG wrote far too many contracts. Lehman party to 7-10% of market
trades, increasing risk index and catalyzing banking busts
Not settled through exchange – posed severe counter – party risks
All this was a combustible mixture!!
Stock markets
Global equity markets witnessed record growth
Equity Valuations reached a record high
16
Commodity prices
Greed got the better of the system
Investors turned to
commodities in search of
high returns and catalyzed
record high commodity prices
Commodity markets could
not sustain the pressure
Rapidly rising commodity
prices stoked inflation across
the board
Inflation triggers
Growing consumption
demand led to steep rise in
food and non-food inflation
Inflation which was earlier
contained due to aggressive
manufacturing by Asia/China,
could no longer be controlled
once commodity, house and
food prices shot up
Rising prices for food and commodities triggered inflation
18
Inflation
High commodity prices kicked in inflation in developed and emerging markets
Food, housing and commodity boom triggered inflation
Trigger for sub-prime
Rising inflation
Hike in the interest rates
Source: Tuatara Management Limited, 4 July 2008
Break-down of loan-consumption cycle
20
Impact on the equity markets
(Worlds Equity Market Cap)
Credit Crunch leads to withdrawal of funds from equity markets, leading
to a drastic fall in indices
Fall in overall consumer demand further leads to fall in the stocks
India – Following Global Trends
Indian and China following
global GDP trends
Slowing growth in US & EU have
impacted exports
Slowdown : A fallout from global trends?
Global overview - Summary
Indian economic boom during 2003-08 coincided with and was
helped by the global economy boom
Bust in 2008 has been followed by severe crisis, which is still
continuing in Europe
Indian economy has been impacted due to the bust.
Indian growth has returned to pre-boom period performance
Indian economy increasingly linked to global economy
India mirroring global cycles
India - Current GDP Trends
Significant reduction in GDP
− Contraction in manufacturing
− Slower growth in services
− Slowdown in investment
Other concerns
− Bludgeoning fiscal deficit
− High inflation
− Rupee depreciation
− European crisis
India – On the edge
Advantage India…..
Economy
Liberal Society
Democracy
Demography
Economy – Size & potential
Large and growing
economy
Growth driven by internal
consumption
Liberalized industry &
financial system
India – Robust GDP growth
Second fastest growth rate consistently in large economies
Stable growth
World’s largest democracy with advanced (but slow) legal structure
Savings & Investment
High savings and
investment rates
Supported by
sophisticated
financial markets
ICOR-4
Thus savings
can support 8%
GDP growth
Savings to support investments
GDP Structure - Drivers
GDP led by services based
on:
− Strong IT infrastructure
− English speaking population
− Young population &
favourable demographics
− Strong education systems
GDP structure driven by educated populace and free society
FII inflows
Favoured FII destination
Demography & demographics dividend
Only 5.5% of population over 65 years
Median age – 26 years : over 52% below
25 years
By 2030, around 62 – 63% of Indian
population will be in working age with
lowest dependency ratio
Demographics are not destiny Large and growing middle class