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Transcript Presentation - GOPIO Belgium
EICC-GOPIO Conference
Jammu & Kashmir:
Reform and Reconstruction
November 9, 2006
Brussels
India story
• It is the CHINDIA decade
• India is the flavour right now
• Macroeconomics is looking good
– GDP growth will exceed 8%
– Invisible exports up 106%
– Manufacturing up 22 %
• FII flows graduating into FDI
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2
“29” state economies
• India is not a single economy
• It is a group of 29 economies
• Differential levels of development
– Different enabling environments
– Diverse resource endowments
• Next phase of action and reform at state level
• India not one opportunity, 29 opportunity sets
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3
J&K is special
• J&K is a “Special Category State”
• This status gives it:
– Limited applicability of national economic
legislations
– Some rigidities in land laws
– Flexibility in regulatory framework
– Greater quantum of federal assistance on
more liberal terms
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4
Infrastructural gap analysis:
• Aggregate infrastructure:
– Economic infrastructure
– Social infrastructure
– Administrative infrastructure
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5
Dreadful decade
• During 90s, J&K as an economy was devastated
• Biggest damage was decimation of institutional
capacity, especially, economic administrative
capacity
• Results:
–
–
–
–
government finances in a mess
Expenditure allocations non-developmental
Infrastructure not maintained and destroyed
Slump in growth
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6
Aggregate Infrastructure index
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
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J&K
All
India
1985
2003
7
Economic Infrastructure Index
80
75
Index
70
J&K
65
60
55
1985
1990
2003
Years
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8
Eco Infrastructure: Disaggregated
200
150
100
50
1985
0
2003
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9
6 November 2006
10
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11
Cost of catching up
• J&K is 50 basis points below what it would
have been
• Each basis point costs Rs 1000 crore
• Financial implications of being where J&K
would have been : Rs 50,000 crore
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12
Strategy:
Peace via economic reconstruction
•The three “R” mission:
– Revive political initiatives
– Reform the government
– Reconstruct the economy
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13
Major constraints
• Infrastructure
– Power
– Connectivity
– Communication
• Institutional capacity
– Governance
– Policy regime
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14
Requirements
• Overall enabling environment
• Well laid out fiscal policy that ensures
government has investable surplus
• Well defined and effective industrial
policy which overcomes structural
negatives
• Autonomous investment in Infrastructure
especially power
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15
J&K: Changing Conditions
Socio-Political situation:
Domestic changes:
Democratically elected sub-national government
Local body election after 32 years
Same party in power at the Centre and the State
after 24 years
First time a coalition government in the state
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16
Peace process:
International peace process:
Srinagar-Muzaffarabad road opened after
52 years
Visa requirement within the greater J&K
abolished
Freer movement of people across the LOC
Trade relations on the anvil
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17
Reforming Government
• Creating institutional capacity for:
– Instituting a proper policy framework
– Bringing efficiency in expenditure
– Improving delivery of services
• Bring a balance in state finances
– Reduce pre-emption of resources
– Align revenues and expenditures
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18
Institutional Capacity Building
• Economic Reconstruction Agency set
up
• Financial Restructuring Authority in
the works
• Privatisation of major corporations,
starting with Power Development
State Corporation
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19
Public Expenditure Policy
• Basic & maintenance activity financed through
by government
• Series of well-designed interventions, in the
nature of sectoral specific packages, with
alternative private funding
– J&K Development Fund
– Multilateral Institutional Funding
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20
Industrial Incentives
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
No income tax till 2013
Capital Investment Subsidy of 30%
Exemption on toll tax till 2015
GST exemption till 2015
CST exemption to SSI units till 2015.
Interest Subsidy of 3% to new industrial units
15% price preference to SSI units on landed cost.
Air freight subsidy of 50% at 15% till 2015
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21
Industrial policy:
• Industrial Committee with the Chief Minister as
the Chairman for providing response to emerging
situations.
• Permanent Grievance Redressal Committee
established.
• No consignment claiming benefit under the
Industrial Policy 2004 will be detained at the
entry point of the state for more than 24 hours.
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22
Economic Reconstruction Plan
• Objectives of intervention:
– Expanding economic infrastructure;
– Expanding the provision of basis services
– employment and income generation.
• Phase I:
– Revive the rural economy of J&K by
– Restoring critical rural infrastructure
• Phase II:
– Create urban infrastructure
– fiscal consolidation of govt
– Build utilities through PPP
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23
Peace through Economic Reconstruction
Prime Minister’s Reconstruction Plan:
Timeframe : 2005-06 to 2008-09
Size : Rs 240 bn
Focus areas: Power, Roads, Hospitals and Tourist Infrastructure
Asian Development Bank’s Multi-sectoral Investment Plan:
Timeframe : 2005-06 to 2009-10
Size : Rs 20 bn
Focus areas : Rural connectivity, Urban Infrastructure
Japanese Bank of Industrial Cooperation:
Timeframe : 2007-08 to 2010-11
Size : Rs 35 bn
Focus areas : Water supply and Urban sanitation
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24
Staggering Numbers
Prime Minister’s Reconstruction Plan:
Rs 240 bn
Asian Development Bank’s Multi-sectoral Investment: Rs 20 bn
Japanese Bank of Industrial Cooperation:
Rs 37 bn
In addition to this,
Normal spending plans:
Rs 45 bn p.a
Three year autonomous expenditure of:
Rs 340 bn+
All this money will be managed by and will pass through the banking
channels of the Jammu and Kashmir Bank
And this is not all…..
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25
Trickle down impact
Crowding in of investment:
- public investment in infrastructure will induces
private investment with backward and forward
linkages
- Growth of SME’s
- Growth of ancillaries associated with projects picks up
- Pick up in induced demand of the private sector
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26
Private Investment :Picking Up
Quantity:
Investment in the SME sector till July 2006 :
Rs 70 bn
Proposals in the pipeline:
Rs 120 bn
The flow of funds is in the range of :
Rs 500 bn
Quality:
Top notch Indian corporates:
Bharti
Reliance (ADA) Infocom
Mahindra and Mahindra
Lupin Laboratories
Essar telecom
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27
Infrastructural spending
3000
2646
2500
2000
1598
1500
1198
985
1000
500
2002-03
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2003-04
2004-05
2005-2006
28
In real terms
•
•
•
•
•
New Roads
Macdemisation
Primary Health Centres
Sub-districts Hospitals
District Hospitals
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=
=
=
=
=
1100 kms
2300 kms
66
7
2
29
This means, everyday..
• 5 kms of new roads will be laid out
• 10 kms of roads will be macdemised
• Every week one PHC will be
opened/upgraded
• Every two months one SDH
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Economics of Peace:
A. Pure growth effect
– Increased level of economic activity due to improved
socio-political situation
– For example:
• Tourist inflow in 2006 has already crossed 1989 levels:
– Income multiplier of tourism sector is 1.66
– Private sector investments in tourist infrastructure
– Credit to tourism industry has picked up
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Reconstruction Impact
B. Normalcy plus economic reconstruction
- Economic growth accelerates due to reconstruction of
economy through :
* autonomous investments in physical infrastructure
* Induced investment in production activity
Example:
Acceleration of Economic growth:
State SDP growth :
13.5 per cent
Commercial Agricultural growth :
9.7 per cent
SMEs projected at :
16.3 per cent
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32
Economic Growth: Trends
6
5.5
5
4.5
4
3.5
3
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33
State Income: Composition
Secondary
13%
Primary
34%
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Tertiary
53%
34
Credit gap
• J&K accounts for 0.70 per cent of national GDP
•Yet, it absorbs only 0.30 per cent of total national
credit
• Productive sectors of the economy account for less than
5 per cent of the credit disbursed in J&K
•Comparable national average is 30 per cent
• J&K accounts for 1 per cent of India’s population
•Yet it accounts for only less than 0.2 per cent of
personal credit disbursed in India
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35
Results of Fiscal Reforms
• Three consecutive zero-deficit budgets
• Revenue surplus up from Rs 128 crore in
02/03 to Rs 2800 crore in 05-06 ;
• Fiscal deficit down from 7.5% in 2002/03
to 5% of SDP in 04-05
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36
Revenue Performance
10
9
8
7
6
tax/sdp
5
4
3
2
1
0
non-tax/sdp
20012002
6 November 2006
20022003
20032004
20042005
20052006
20062007
37
REVENUE SURPLUS : TRENDS
2000
1438
Rs Crore
1500
1025
1000
500
128
0
-500
-1000
1999/0
-542
-1500
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2000/1
2001/2
-334
2002/3
2003/4
(RE)
2004/5
(BE)
-960
YEARS
38
Fiscal balance
Revenue Surplus as % NSDP
14.00
12.75
12.00
10.10
10.00
7.01
8.00
6.00
4.00
3.80
4.22
4.93
2.00
0.00
2001-2002
6 November
2006
2002-2003 2003-2004 2004-2005 2005-2006 2006-2007
39
Power : Options
• Increase physical availability by:
– Developing 7000 MW over the next 3 years
– Changing the power mix of J&K by accessing
thermal capacity especially in winter
– Increasing the share of J&K in some central
power projects on J&K rivers are
commissioned
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40
On the anvil
•
•
•
•
•
Opening up of Power sector
PPP in Health sector
Privatisation of Tourist sector
Development of Financial services sector
Incentivisation of crafts and SME sector
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Power Development
• J&K’s water resources offer immense
potential for commercial hydro power
generation.
• The potential is as high as 14,000 MW of
hydro power ; investment of 1,50,000 crore
• Only about 10% of this has been exploited
so far
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42
Power sector:
• Taking PDC public to create India’s largest
power utility company
• Reforms in transmission and distribution
sectors
– Unbundling transmission and distribution
entities.
– Establish a transmission utility company
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43
The Financial Universe
New York
Regional
Gap
Tokyo
Sydney
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44
A Proposition : JK IFC
• JK International Financial Centre: A hub for institutional financial
services
• A financial cluster in the vale of Kashmir
• Window to access regional wealth
• World-class regulations
• International legal system including a commercial court
• State-of-the-art communication infrastructure
• 100% foreign ownership
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45
Sectors of Focus
•
Banking Services & Capital Markets
•
Asset Management & Fund Registration
•
Islamic Finance
•
Reinsurance & Captives
•
Business Processing Operations
•
Ancillary Service Providers
•
Non-Regulated & Others
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46
Value Proposition
• JKIFC has its own legal, regulatory & judicial environment based
on best-practices from International jurisdictions
• Laws are distinctly different from National laws
• Will provide the platform to list & trade in financial instruments
like Bonds, Equities, Funds etc. without restriction of ownership
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To sum up
• J&K government is enroute to:
– Financial stability
– Infrastructure Development
– Creation of an enabling environment for private
business
• J&K economy is poised for
– Growth
– Absorption of private investment
– Specialisation in financial services under the
“stewardship” of J&K Bank
6 November 2006
48
Jammu and Kashmir Bank
An introduction
Profile
Incorporated in 1938 as a limited liability
company
Governed by the Companies Act and
Banking Regulation Act of India
Regulated by the Reserve Bank of India
and SEBI
Listed on National stock exchange (NSE)
and Bombay stock exchange (BSE)
Rated “P1 +” by Standard and Poor-CRISIL:
highest degree of safety
Four
decades
of
profitability and dividends
6 November 2006
uninterrupted
50
Shareholding Pattern
GOVERNMENT OF J&K
FOREIGN INST. INVESTORS
53.17%
31.94%
12.05%
RESIDENT INDIVIDUALS 1.44%
INDIAN MUTUAL FUNDS
6 November 2006
0.32% NON RESIDENT INDIANS
1.08%
BODIES CORP. / BNKS / INS. CO.
As on October 27, 2006
51
One of a Kind
• Private sector bank despite
government’s majority holding
• Sole banker and lender of last
resort to the Government of J & K
• Only
private
sector
bank
designated as RBI’s agent for
banking business
• Carries out banking business of
the central government
• Collects taxes for Central Board
of Direct Taxes in J & K
6 November 2006
52
Infrastructure
• Fastest growing bank with 516 branches
• 98 per cent business computerized
•
•
•
•
•
•
Anywhere, Tele-banking and SWIFT
Internet, SMS and Mobile Banking
Globally connected ATM network
Mobile ATM Service
Global Access Debit & Credit Cards
Live on RTGS System of RBI
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53
Financial Services Portfolio
Insurance joint venture with MetLife International .
Distributor of :
Life Insurance products of MetLife (India) Pvt. Ltd. and
Non-Life Insurance products of Bajaj Allianze General
Insurance Co. Ltd.
Providing Depository Services
Offering Stock Broking Services.
Collection Agent for utility services provided by State and
private sector.
6 November 2006
54
Productivity per Employee
60
48.25
50
39.4
Rs. in Mn.
40
31.9
29.8
30
24.6
20.6
20
15
12.4
10
9.6
7.7
0
FY-96 2006
FY-97
6 November
FY-98
FY-99
FY-00
FY-01
FY-02
FY-03
FY-04
55FY-05
Capital Adequacy :
Most Comfortable
16.0
Tier I CAR (%)
14.0
13.6
12.5
12.0
9.6
10.0
9.3
9.1
8.9
8.2
8.0
8.0
7.7
7.6
ICICI
Vijaya
Bank
7.3
6.0
4.0
2.0
0.0
As6onNovember
31st March 2005
2006
Corp.
Bank
J&K
Bank
HDFC
Bank
UTI Bank
SBI-C
PNB
BoB
SBI
56 Canara
Bank
Asset Quality (net NPA) :
Among the Best
% of NPAs
3.00
2.56
2.30
1.96
2.00
1.30
1.19
1.00
0.30
0.00
6 November 2006
Series1
STATE
2.56
ICICI
2.30
FEDER
1.96
UTI
1.30
J&K
1.19
HDFC
57
0.30
Operating Costs : The Lowest
OPERATING COST / AVERAGE ASSETS % - FY-05
3
2.7
2.4
2.5
2.4
2.3
2.3
2.2
2.1
2.1
1.9
2
1.7
1.5
1.5
1
0.5
0
PNB
HDFC
6 November 2006
SBI
UTI
BoB
VIJAYA
CORP
BANK
CANARA
ICICI
ORIENTAL
J&K
BANK
58
Super specialist banking
• Knowledge banking foray to create a
niche in:
• Leather Branch in Chennai
• Spices Branch in Cochin
• Castor Branch in Mumbai
• Could pave way for Commodity Bank
6 November 2006
59
Addressing financial depth
J&K bank is a Corporate with a Community
It has a geographical region to itself which lacks financial
depth
bank will bring about a financial deepening of the regional
economy by monetising trade and replacing channels of
informal finance
By creating a new financial architecture in the state
Consolidation of existing financial institutions by engineering
a series of M&As
6 November 2006
60
Thank you!