September 23, 2012

Impact of FDI in Indian retail: Farmers will surely heave a sigh of relief, they no longer have to spill their Tomato on the streets


The Man Mohan Singh Govt  recently announced a slew of reforms, including allowing foreign direct investment (FDI) in multi-brand retail up to a level of 51%. A policy requiring that single-brand retail multinationals source 30% of products and materials from small businesses and craftsmen was changed to mandating that the same amount come from Indian firms. Opening up FDI will not only lead to a greater variety of products for sale and increased consumer choice, but also penetrate deep into the hinterland of Indian economic activity and do much to improve the country's "Shunned Sectors" agriculture produce procurement and supply chain, infrastructure and logistics.

The direct FDI impact in the short term from retail chains will be modest. If we look at the numbers, FDI in 2008 was in the ballpark of US$35 billion and declined in 2009 and 2010. FDI in 2011 came in at around US$27 billion or so. International retail chains in the shorter term of 18 to 24 months' horizon, will not bring in US$8 billion to get back on track.

The observed trend in the foreign venture of large retail chains takes place in three phases. In the first phase, foreigh retail chains, often set up a test pilot project. This is usually done through a partnership with local chains, with risk and revenue sharing model, or a few flagship stores that serve as brand broadcasters. The chains employ this initial-phase entry strategy to learn lessons about the local markets. They assess demand, test merchandizing strategies and set up operational capabilities. In this phase, they bring in some investment to cover their set-up costs and for establishing their sourcing (supply) footprint. This usually takes 18-to-24 months.

In the second phase, firms expand their demand footprint; they open more stores and increase both the scale of operations (volume of products sourced) and scope of products that they feature. There is considerable investment in this phase in the form of real estate acquisition, putting in operational infrastructure, establishing sourcing relationships, establishing supply chains and massive logistics capabilities. This is volume-independent investment -- that is, investment meant to gear up for volumes of business to come, but not calibrated to the current volume of business.

In the third phase, the investment keeps pace with the rate of expansion. As volumes grow and urban and semi-urban retail locations get saturated, companies look for new locations and bring in investment that is calibrated to growth in volumes. It is in the second phase and the third phase -- which come after the initial the 18 to 24 months operation -- that large investments manifest themselves.
 
The arrival of foreign retail chains has two-fold impact on current unstructured markets. First, these companies would set up supply chains and logistical capabilities, spurring significant improvements in the infrastructure needed to source, ship, store and deliver products, covering all aspects of value chain and supply chain activities, including storage, warehousing, and information-intensive operations. Second, their entry and expansion induce domestic competitors to invest in infrastructure and logistics, as well as greatly speed up the emergence of product standards especially in perishables and personal consumables, and begin the process of bypassing monopsony buyers and traders, especially those who have been dominating and rigging  the prices of agriculture produce in procurement, and others as well  in  many product categories in current unstructured markets.

This brings us to the understanding, that, foreign investment in retail has an impact that goes beyond its direct investment impact. It is a force multiplier that induces even more investment from competitors.

Impact on Mom-and-Pop Retailers: FDI is often opposed on the grounds that it will put mom-and-pop stores out of business. This is very unlikely for several reasons. The big-box retailers, when they venture into developing markets, do not use the same business model as they do in the U.S. Walmart -- the most iconic of these companies and the one most often cited as a threat to Indian mom-and-pop stores -- is by no means the lowest-price retailer in China. Walmart U.S. is based on "everyday low prices." The firm has an activity system that is meant to help Walmart compete as a cost leader. The company began by locating in rural areas and then moved to suburban and semi-urban areas in the U.S. In China, the rural areas and semi-urban areas are not where the money is. Consumers in China -- unlike their American counterparts living in suburbia - do not drive miles and do bulk purchasing, nor do they have massive storage facilities at home. In India, China, Brazil, Indonesia, Thailand and Mexico, the vast majority of educated middle and upper classes live in the cities (and not in semi-urban and rural areas) where real estate is very expensive and population density is high. The foreign retail chains will need to make very expensive real estate investments. They will have a very high variable cost of operation. Their fixed, volume-independent costs are also likely to be much higher than the mom-and-pop convenience stores. These chains will operate with price points that are much higher than those featured by the mom-and-pop shops.

These firms' real competition will be the domestic multi-brand retailers. A recent study by the CII and Boston Consulting Group estimated the size of organized retail of US$28 billion in 2010 to be 6% to 7% of the total retail market in India. The study predicted that the size of retail -- total retail sector size, not just organized retail -- would grow to US$1.25 trillion by 2020 if the efficiencies that typically come from greater competition and modernization of retail supply systems were to be unleashed. Under this scenario, the study predicts that the size of organized retail could grow to US$260 billion or about 20.8% of the total market. So even under this scenario, the idea that a fractional segment that accounts for 20.8% of the total economic activity of a sector can drive the remaining 79% of that sector out of business does not stand the scrutiny of reason.

The CII/BCG study also estimates that if the organized retail sector is not modernized -- the "as is" economic scenario, as the study calls it -- the size of the sector will be about US$170 billion. This underperforms the earlier scenario by about 35% or so. That difference could be a job creation deficit of about 1.4 million jobs with an even higher potential loss of economic product since organized retail pays better than local, scale-deprived mom-and-pop establishments. This is without taking into consideration other jobs that would not be created in economic activities that span infrastructure and logistics.

Supply Footprint: Traders -- Not Farmers -- Beware. The foreign retail chains will have a more significant impact on traders that dominate procurement of commodities and perishables, including grains and cereals. It is not surprising that these traders are the most virulent opponents of FDI in retail (the main opposition party that derives its support from the trading castes and traders has openly stated that "traders' interests will be harmed by FDI in retail").
 
Indian farmers and many other rural producers are at the mercy of large and well-organized monopsony buyers who rig the prices during the harvest season, pushing the farmer to sell at a price far less than the cost price. Very often these traders dominate geographies and account for nearly all procurement in their geographies. In many states, the food ministry determines who it will buy from and this is usually a small number of traders who in turn dominate direct procurement from farmers in their geographies. These are economic fiefdoms that they dominate and exploit. When the Carrefours, Walmarts and Tescos set up direct procurement mechanisms where sophisticated procurement systems are put in place and information about demand (prices, product varieties and quantities demanded) becomes more easily available, it becomes more difficult for the middlemen to dominate local geographies and restrict competition. The emergence of these supply chains that drive transparency of information will bring significantly more competition in sourcing and better prices for producers.
 
The CII-Boston Consulting Group study found that an Indian tomato farmer earns about 30% or even less of the final price paid by the consumer. In Kolar district, in Karnataka, Farmers, almost every year,  spill the harvested Tomato on the street out of frustration and in protest of plummeting tomato prices. The prices offered by these monopsony buyers would not recover the transportation cost; let alone making up for loans borrowed, manure, year long labour and a living. This is how over 3 lakh Farmers over the years have commited suicide in India to save their Honour. In indian economy most of  the sectors have the free will to price their produce, but the Agriculture sector. The manure companies, the seed companies, the power supply companies religiously rise their price when cost of an ingredient of their produce rises. The farmer has no free will to calculate and fix his price for his produce! Our exploitative markets, dominated by the monopsony buyers,  compell the farmer to sell his produce for a price far less than the cost of production. What else a farmer would do to honour his financial commitments when prices are rigged and the poor fellow is pushed to sell below the cost price; he would surely kill himself to save his honour. These are but Honour Killings by the exploitative market forces. The agro markets are controlled by such exploitative fiefdoms that our Governance has failed to curb them and do justice to farmers in all these decades. Simply because the people engaged in agriculture, at large, are not fairly educated and organized, these poor innocent farmers are exploited by these monopsony buyers in the name of free market. 
 
On the other hand in developed countries, the farmers and producers get as much as 70% of the price paid by the consumer. For this reason alone, farmers and producers should welcome this development; and for this reason alone, traders are opposing it. Indeed, the Indian Farmer and Industrial Alliance (IFIA), a joint venture of the Consortium of Indian Farmers Associations (CIFA), recognized the potential benefits of eliminating middlemen and has expressed its support for opening the retail sector to foreign investment.

As with any other sector, the entry of foreign players introduces competition that will benefit some and will work to the detriment of others. The beneficiaries in this case are the Indian consumers, the lower middle class, which will benefit from the well-paying jobs that will be created, and the producers of goods -- including farmers -- that have been at the mercy of middlemen and monopsony buyers and trader monopolies. As usual, the interests that are threatened have sought to portray this move as detrimental to India.
 
The Govt ought to device policies and put such regulatory mechanisms in place so that better systems of supply chains, logistical capabilities, infrastructure needed to source, ship, store and deliver products, covering all aspects of value chain and supply chain activities, including storage, warehousing, and information-intensive operations, evolve over the years. It is time that India reexamined its dogmatic, beliefs and practices and  Think-Out-of-The Box.  

September 20, 2012

Plurality of Religions and their Conflicting Profecies

I would like to thank and appreciate all the participants for their participation in this objective discussion on plurality of Religions of the World and the position of the God in respect of the plurality and associated conflicts the religions are imposing on the innocent Human beings on the earth for being born in a particular religion and confusing them and pushing them to pain than peace and prosperity.
 
The Core issue is plurality and conflicting stand-points of Religions of the world; not from innocent followers' perspective. I would like to conclude the discussion. The purpose of this discussion was to understand the means of conflict among the religions of the world. There can not be plurality in the ways of Creation. As students of science we understand the creation of the Universe, the earth, the life on earth, evolution of Human race, evolution of Human intelligence in a logical frame work and there is no plurality in this understanding. The law of Gravitation is same for people of all the faiths; the anatomy of all Humans is the same irrespective of their faiths! So this brings us to the conclusion that these religious conflicts are the products of plurality of inconsistent human thoughts imposed on innocent people as profecies.
 
So, lets shed all our conflicting beliefs and live in rational and more Human ways; ....in the ways of the Nature.

Why do we think, white skin is beautiful?


This value system in our minds quietly works and gives us an impression( an illusion truly!) that the white skin (of the Europeans )is superior, therefore beautiful. When certain forms are superior and beautiful, the opposite and non-conforming forms surely and logically appear ugly!

Now you know what is truly beautiful and what is not! beauty or ugly is not an attribute of an object, but a mere thought and a view of the mind.


Maya of the Market economy and the Farmer In India

Over 3 lakh Farmers Commited suicide in India to save their Honour. In indian economy all other sectors have the free will to price their produce, but the Agriculture sector. The manure companies, the seed companies, the power supply companies religiously rise their price when cost of an ingredient of their produce rises. Strangely the Farmer alone has no free-will in the free-market to calculate and fix his price for his produce! Our exploitative markets compell the former to sell his produce for the price far less than the cost of production in the garb of pseudo demand and supply game!  What else a farmer would do to honour his financial commitments when prices are rigged and the poor fellow is pushed to sell below the cost price; he would surely kill himself to save his honour. These are but Honour Killings by the exploitative market forces. The agro markets are controlled by such exploitative forces that our Governance has failed to curb them and do justice to farmers in all these decades. Simply because the people involved in agriculture, at large, are not fairly educated and organized, these poor innocent farmers are exploited in the garb of free market.
 
Our farmers would not need any of the freebies like loan waivers, free electricity and any subsidies or tax rebates; they just need a rational price for their produce, calculated on the basis of cost of production.

It is an irony that in our economy, a litre of Milk is sold at a price less than a litre a of bottled water. People buy a litre of bottled water with pride, while grumbling to pay little more for milk. We have created such exploitative and false pride markets.

Let me recall the words of Prof.M.D.Nanjundaswamy, who once proclaimed that the loans on the farmers are all 'False Loans'. The farmers have been all along lured in to these perpetual loans by compelling them to sell their produce at a price far less than the cost price by these exploitative and fraudulent market practices.

The Govt is ought to come to the rescue of these innocent and poor farmers in not offering any freebies but by regulating the agriculture prices on rational terms; for, the farmer community is not organized and financially sound enough to play the games, the other sectors play in the Maya of Market Economy.