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INSIDE STORY

INDIA'S TRILLION DOLLAR ECONOMY

By SIDDHARTH SRIVASTAVA


It is the kind of talk that has made the world look toward India. Signifying market value, investment potential and growth prospects, three independent projections have recently crossed the magic trillion-mark.

With the rupee appreciating sharply, the Indian economy crossed the US$1 trillion mark last week, making it the 12th country to achieve the milestone, according to Credit Suisse.

"Indian gross domestic product [GDP] at the current price level is Rs.41 trillion. With the rupee appreciating to below 41 against the US dollar, yesterday [last Wednesday] was the first day for the economy to be a trillion-dollar economy," the Swiss investment firm said.

The rupee, which is trading around 40-41 to the dollar, has appreciated about 8.4% this year and is up 15.4% from a three-year low of 47.04 last July.

As recently as 2000-01, India's GDP was less than $500 billion, which means it is more than twice the size in the past six years, due to consistent 8-9% growth.

According to expert calculations, even if the economy grows by as little as 5% this fiscal year and inflation hovers around 5%, the country's GDP for 2007-08 would be comfortably over $1 trillion even if the exchange rate moved back to Rs45 to the dollar.

Meanwhile, Mukesh Ambani-promoted Reliance Industries Limited (RIL), India's most valued firms, with a market cap of more than $50 billion, has become the first private entity to cross the Rs1 trillion ($25 billion) revenue mark.

RIL's net profit for the fiscal year 2006-07 crossed Rs100 billion, while revenues soared past Rs1 trillion. Fiscal-year net profit jumped by more than 20%, while turnover zoomed by 29%.

"I am pleased to report yet another year of robust performance by RIL. [Fiscal year] 2006-07 has also been an eventful year for the company," RIL chairman Ambani said, attributing the performance to robust growth in petrochemicals and refining businesses.

In another trillion-dollar story, the accumulated wealth of the 20-million-strong non-resident Indians (NRI) community has been estimated to be more than $1 trillion, more than the Indian economy of about $850 billion at the time of preparing the report.

These are the findings of a High-Powered Expert Committee appointed by the federal government to find ways to make Mumbai an international financial hub.

Overseas Indians are estimated to hold financial wealth, apart from real estate, gold and art, of more than $500 billion, while total wealth is pegged at more than $1 trillion.

"These NRIs were a natural beachhead as a customer base where an Indian personal-wealth-management industry can get started. Their wealth-management services were ... being sourced almost exclusively from abroad,'' the report said.

International remittances to India are the highest in the world, worth $25 billion a year and growing at 25% annually. It is one of the fastest-growing markets in the world, with the Persian Gulf region one of the major contributors.

Recently, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said Indians abroad are the backbone of country's economy and that "their welfare is in the country's interest".

A JPMorgan report has said that the Indian diaspora can be a "powerful catalyst" in helping India realize its aspiration of 10% annual GDP growth.

According to the US Census, it is the Indian-Americans (numbering close to 2 million) who have moved ahead as the most vibrant Asian minority in the US, garnering the highest levels of income, education and job status.

Indians overseas, of course, continue to be in the news.

NRI steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal has earned a staggering 4.1 billion pounds ($8.2 billion) during the past year and retained his position as the richest person in Britain in 2007 with a wealth worth 19 billion pounds.

Knight Frank, one of Britain's biggest real-estate agents, released a report recently called "Brics & Mortar: International Project Marketing 2007", which said Indians are keen on places in central London such as Grosvenor Square, Kensington Palace Gardens and Park Lane. The report added that mid-price residences, costing between 400,000 and 700,000 pounds, are most popular.

However, there are warning signs as well.

Last week global ratings agency Moody's warned about an overheating Indian economy, citing higher-than-acceptable inflation, a growing merchandise trade deficit, still-high rates of domestic credit growth, and rapid rupee appreciation mainly due to strong capital-account inflows.

"Such trends are neither transitory, coincidental nor independent from one another; rather, they are the result of a structural shortfall in the absorptive capacity of the economy," Moody's vice president Kristin Lindow said.

Moody's projects that a stronger supply-side policy response will sustain firm medium-term growth accompanied by less risk of overheating.

Excess demand combined with supply-side constraints due to stagnant agricultural growth and infrastructure bottlenecks have resulted in inflation climbing to a new two-year high, with vegetable prices, especially onions, surging sharply across the country.

It looks as if the demand pressures are only going to rise. Foreign direct investment in the country has jumped nearly threefold to $15 billion in 2006-07 as the world's second-fastest-growing economy continues to lure global investors.

Reformed real-estate investment laws for NRIs and foreign investors have provided the fillip to catapult the Indian real-estate market toward $50 billion by 2010.

India's foreign-exchange reserves crossed $200 billion for the first time on April 6, as per the data released by the apex bank, the Reserve Bank of India. Seventeen years ago, India's forex reserves were barely $1 billion. The reserves at the end of December 2003 totaled $100 billion.

The World Bank's Global Economic Prospects for 2006 reported that India for the first time overtook China as the nation whose workforce remits the highest amounts, an indication that Indians have emerged as the top "alien" workforce.

According to industry figures, the country's top five software firms, TCS, Infosys, Wipro, Satyam and HCL Technologies, alone added more than 23,000 employees to their payrolls in the last quarter of 2006. This year they are expected to hire 100,000 more.

Indian retail is coming of age and set to generate $430 billion from the current $328 billion with the entry of big players such as Bihari-Wal-Mart and Reliance and some other foreign players, says a report by a leading industry lobby, the Federation of India Chambers of Commerce and Industry.

According to the report, more than $30 billion of investment is likely to be made in the next five to seven years. This exponential growth is expected to generate 18 million jobs, thereby becoming the second-largest employment-generating sector after agriculture.
NEWS GALLERY
INDIA
JUSTICE BLINDED
THE WOMEN ON TOP
NEW ERA IN BIHAR
COMMUNAL VIOLENCE
THE MISSING GIRLS
HIV THERAPY IN INDIA
FAR FROM THE MAD CROWD
WHAT MAKES WOMEN LAUGH?
LEGACY OF THE CITY OF PEARLS
NO PLACE FOR RABBLEROUSERS
CONFUSING BRAND NAMES
QUALITY CONTROL IN DRUGS
SINKING FEELING IN ATTITUDE
TOUGH ROAD FOR PHARMA
INTERNATIONAL
A LIFE ON THE DARK SIDE
IS MONOGAMY OUTDATED?
INDIA DOMINATES WORLD
STEM CELL RESEARCH
RUSSIAN NUCLEAR PACTS
DEGRADING ISLAMIC VALUES
TALIBAAN HITS AT INDIA
A BITTER DRUG INDUSTRY
STAINS OF AFGHANISTAN
WHERE SATI STILL HAPPENS
THE BUSINESS OF LEISURE
WHY CHINA VERSUS MAOISM?
PROFIT EDUCATION EXPOSED
ISLAMIC BANKING MOOTED
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
BLACK ECONOMY
INDIA WAVE BIDS
DIABETES BOMB
POWER INDIA
SOARING OIL
BUSINESS & ECONOMY
GLOBAL ECONOMY
FIGHT CORRUPTION
FATE OF TABLOIDS
INDIA MOISTS
METROSEXUALS
SOCIETY & CULTURE
AGRI-CULTURE
INDIA GLOBAL
HERO ABHISHEK
SAARC BITES
SAARC SITUATION
OPINION & ANALYSIS
INDIA AVIAN FLU
BIG UNIVERSE
INDIA DEMOCRACY
GLOBAL MARKETS
FOREIGN POLICY
HEALTH & MEDICINE
MORAL MORASS
ANDHRA NARMADA
MOBILE RATING
INDIA TERROR
LIFE & RELATIONSHIP
POSITIVE SAARC
INVISIBLE WAR
BANGLA BOMBERS
BETTER EMPLOYEE

AUTOMAKER SHIFT
MULTI-MALL MANIA
SYRIA MAKING
MINISTER'S WAR

UNSAFE AMERICA
VOLKSWAGEN ROW
GLOBAL DISEASE
ALQAEDA PLANS

SOFTWARE BOOM
YAHOO & MSN
GOOGLE INSIDE
INFO LEADERS

INDIAN PHARMA
JAPAN HEADING?
DUBAI RENTALS
ASIA HIGHWAYS
RAINBOW BOX

'OPERATION CRUSH'
FEMALE FOETICIDE
HOTTEST SINGLES
STOLEN BRIDES
HNN ARCHIVE - 1
HNN ARCHIVE - 2
HNN ARCHIVE - 3



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