Posts tagged ‘India’

05/11/2014

How Modi Has Moved Into Kejriwal’s Space – India Real Time – WSJ

The capital of the world’s largest democracy, which has been under president’s rule for the best part of a year, is set for a fresh election.

There’s no firm date yet for the high-stakes Delhi polls, but for one man the stakes are higher than for most.

Arvind Kejriwal, former chief minister and anti-corruption activist, has what some analysts describe as one last chance to unite his fractious, young party and revive his own flagging political fortunes.

Mr. Kejriwal’s Aam Admi Party, which stormed Delhi’s political scene last year with its anti-graft slogans and innovative grass-roots campaign, has struggled to remain relevant since national elections in May, in which it won just four out of 543 parliamentary seats.

In part, analysts suggest, this is because his common man calling card and campaign for a corruption-free India have been appropriated by the leader of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, leaving the AAP headman little space to distinguish himself.

Despite their wide economic and ideological differences, Mr. Modi does appear to have encroached on Mr. Kejriwal’s political ground in recent months.

Let’s look at the evidence.

First, the broom. Mr. Kejriwal’s party made the tool of India’s army of sweepers a weapon in his political arsenal.  As AAP’s symbol, the broom was a visual metaphor of the party’s aim to clean up politics in India.

Mr. Modi has taken the metaphor and made it literal. With a broom in hand last month, he promised to literally clean up India. Everyone from Bollywood stars to opposition politicians has taken up brooms to join him in the sanitation program.

via How Modi Has Moved Into Kejriwal’s Space – India Real Time – WSJ.

04/11/2014

India destroys stockpile of illegal wildlife parts – Businessweek

Indian authorities set fire Sunday to a stockpile of tiger skins, elephant tusks, rhino horns and other illegal animal parts in an effort to discourage wildlife smuggling in South Asia.


Embed from Getty Images

Animal poaching and smuggling have flourished in India, driven by black market demand from China, Vietnam and other Southeast Asian countries where many believe exotic animal parts have medicinal or aphrodisiacal properties. In most cases, there is no scientific evidence that they do.

Indian Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar loaded more than 42,000 illegal animal parts into a large, blazing oven at the Delhi Zoo. The parts included tiger and leopard pelts, reptile skins, rhino horns and shawls made from endangered Tibetan antelope called shahtoosh.

via India destroys stockpile of illegal wildlife parts – Businessweek.

03/11/2014

Religious Tension Escalates in North India Ahead of Muharram – India Real Time – WSJ

As Muslims across India prepare to observe the holy day of Ashura in the Islamic month of Muharram on Tuesday, religious tension between Hindus and Muslims is on the rise in some parts of northern India.

Shiite Muslims, who traditionally hold processions on the 10th day of Muharram to mourn the death of Prophet Muhammad’s grandson, have been forbidden from passing through certain Hindu neighborhoods in New Delhi.

According to Zafarul Islam Khan, head of the All India Muslim Majlis-e-Mushawarat, an umbrella organization of Muslim groups based in Delhi, in the Bawana neighborhood of northwest Delhi, a “maha panchayat,” an unelected village council, on Sunday decided that Muslim processions should be banned in public spaces, particularly those with majority Hindu populations.

Heads of nearby villages dominated by the Hindu Jat caste also attended this meeting to affirm their opposition to the public processions, Mr. Khan says members of the Muslim community told him. Members of the village council could not be reached for comment.

Muslims have, in turn, agreed to restrict their processions to a Muslim-dominated residential colony instead of the main market of Bawana, according to a report in the Times of India.

During the Ashura march — also referred to as Muharram — many Muslims weep and inflict wounds on themselves in an expression of grief for the martyrdom of Hussein, Prophet Muhammad’s grandson.

“The Muslims themselves have decided not to take their processions to Hindu areas,” said Mr. Khan, adding, “this is happening for the first time.”

After communal violence broke out in New Delhi following celebrations for the Hindu festivals of Dussehra and Diwali last month, the atmosphere in neighborhoods with mixed Hindu and Muslim populations is still tense, according to a Times of India report.

In the eastern neighborhood of Trilokpuri in the capital, tension over the construction of a platform for Hindu gatherings close to a mosque led to low intensity violence for several days, culminating in three days of riots that ended Oct. 26.

There is an ongoing conflict over public space, said Mr. Khan, which leads to small incidents of communal tension across the country.

“In my childhood, everyone took part in the [Muharram] processions,” he said, adding that increasing polarization between Hindus and Muslims have turned festivals into a point of communal tension.

Processions for Muharram often begin a few days before the 10th day, which falls on Tuesday this year. On Sunday, authorities imposed curfew-like restrictions in most parts of Srinagar, the Muslim-majority summer capital of the northern state of Jammu and Kashmir, to prevent religious processions of Shiite Muslims on the eighth day of Muharram, according to a report in Xinhua, China’s state-run news agency.

via Religious Tension Escalates in North India Ahead of Muharram – India Real Time – WSJ.

03/11/2014

Wagah Border Flag Ceremony a Casualty of Pakistan Bomb Attack – India Real Time – WSJ

At sunset each day, before the only road crossing between India and Pakistan closes for the night, a military spectacle takes place in which forces from both countries come face-to-face and goose-step to goose-step at the Wagah border for an elaborate flag-lowering ceremony.

On Sunday, as spectators there headed for home, a suicide bomber on the Pakistan side detonated a device that killed dozens and more than 100 injured.

In response, India has now put on hold the ceremony that has taken place for six decades since the creation of Pakistan, according to officials from India’s Border Security Force, a paramilitary force responsible for guarding the country’s land border.

For at least three days the border will close without fanfare, officials said.

The Wagah border is about 14 miles from Lahore. The ceremony, known as ‘Beating Retreat’, attracts thousands of Indians and Pakistanis  as well as a few bemused-looking foreign tourists to the tiered seating on each side of the border and the place echoes to cheers  “Long live India” and “Long live Pakistan” as each side tries to outdo each other.

The south Asian nuclear-armed neighbors have had frosty relations since the partition of the Indian subcontinent in 1947, and have fought three wars over the Himalayan territory of Kashmir, which both sides claim. Sunday’s suicide attack comes amid increased tensions between India and Pakistan after a resurgence of cross-border shooting at the disputed frontier in the Kashmir region.

Despite India and Pakistan’s rocky past and fractious present, the Wagah border ceremony is full of good-natured nationalistic pomp. If you want to get a sense of the atmosphere, think changing of the guard crossed with a baseball game.

The ritual begins with the sound of bugles blown together by military guards on both sides followed by a parade – a well-coordinated, energetic military display of competitive high-kicking put together by members of India’s Border Security Force and the Rangers of Pakistan.

Representatives from each side take it in turns to shout at the top of their voices and for as long as they can into a microphone in what could be described as a yell-off.

The end is marked by the lowering of the flags as soldiers shake hands across the divide between the hostile neighbors, before the border gates are slammed shut.

via Wagah Border Flag Ceremony a Casualty of Pakistan Bomb Attack – India Real Time – WSJ.

03/11/2014

Chinese submarine docks in Sri Lanka despite Indian concerns | Reuters

Submarine Changzheng-2 and warship Chang Xing Dao arrived at the port on Friday, seven weeks after another Chinese submarine, a long-range deployment patrol, had called at the same port ahead of a visit to South Asia by Chinese President Xi Jinping.


Embed from Getty Images

“A submarine and a warship have docked at Colombo harbor. They called on Oct. 31 and will be here for five days for refueling and crew refreshment,” Sri Lankan navy spokesman Kosala Warnakulasuriya said.

“This is nothing unusual. Since 2010, 230 warships have called at Colombo port from various countries on goodwill visits and for refueling and crew refreshment.”

However, the frequency of Chinese visits has become a concern for New Delhi, Indian officials have told Reuters.

“India has raised concerns over this but not aggressively,” an Indian official familiar with diplomatic discussions between the neighbors told Reuters.

China has invested heavily in Sri Lanka in recent years, funding airports, roads, railways and ports, a development that has unsettled India, traditionally the closest economic partner of the island nation of 21 million people.

India has already raised concerns over an aircraft maintenance facility following speculation it could be built in the eastern port city of Trincomalee, which India considers a strategic location in national security terms.

via Chinese submarine docks in Sri Lanka despite Indian concerns | Reuters.

Tags: ,
30/10/2014

Understanding India’s economic geography | McKinsey & Company

India’s rapid growth in the decade to 2012 saw it emerge as one of Asia’s most promising markets. But the recent slowdown made growth and profitability increasingly elusive, forcing companies to think harder about the way they allocate resources. As growth picks up, and rapid shifts in India’s urban and rural economic landscapes occur, marketers will need to make strategic market choices to maximize returns. Understanding the growth drivers and identifying high-potential markets at a granular level are critical priorities for businesses looking to benefit significantly from this returning tide of growth.

Taking into account their existing footprints, product mixes and extensions, and long-term aspirations, companies could consider three approaches to dissect the Indian market and decipher its heterogeneity: states, clusters, and cities. The research underpinning McKinsey’s latest report—India’s economic geography in 2025: States, clusters, and cities—combines a robust understanding of macroeconomic issues at a national level with microlevel insights on the economic and income potential of states, districts, and cities.1 By building a granular view, based on several different economic scenarios, of where growth and market opportunities will emerge, the report shows that businesses can tailor investment decisions to capture a disproportionate share of the pie in India’s ever-changing economic geography.2

Our research focuses on distinct geographic slivers of opportunity at each level of granularity.

States

India’s 29 states and seven union territories are at different stages of demographic and economic evolution. The per capita gross domestic product of states, a marker of their inhabitants’ affluence or deprivation, reasonably depicts the variation in living standards and market potential across India. We have classified states into four broad groups based on their relative 2012 per capita GDP: very high performing, high performing, performing, and low performing. This approach helps companies understand which states will probably contribute most to India’s growth and the potential size of households in different income segments in each state. That in turn makes it possible to estimate future market demand for specific categories of goods and services.3

We find that eight high-performing states will account for some 52 percent of India’s incremental GDP growth from 2012 to 2025. Along with four very high-performing city-states, these eight will have 57 percent of India’s consuming-class households in 2025.4 Rapid urbanization and the associated income growth will propel the high-performing states to per capita income levels similar to those of today’s middle-income nations. In 2025, for instance, Maharashtra’s 128 million residents will have a purchasing-power parity similar to Brazil’s today. Goa’s and Chandigarh’s 2025 purchasing-power parity will mirror that of Spain today (Exhibit 1).

Exhibit 1

By 2025, the standard of living in ‘very high’ and ‘high-performing’ states will mirror that of high- and middle-income nations today.

Metropolitan clusters

Companies considering a granular pan-India play could target metropolitan clusters. We expect that just 49 of them (some 183 districts) will account for about 77 percent of India’s incremental GDP, 72 percent of its consuming-class households, and 73 percent of its income pool from 2012 to 2025.5 Top-ranked metropolitan districts constitute the nucleus of these clusters, and the surrounding high-potential districts make them serviceable markets with similar psychographics (Exhibit 2).6 The clusters are also at least at par with India as a whole on core development parameters, such as access within the household to basic urban services like water supply, sanitation, and electricity. They are therefore appropriate for companies looking to expand into areas where access to basic infrastructure does not pose a binding constraint.

Exhibit 2

Forty-nine high-potential metropolitan clusters will account for about 77 percent of India’s incremental GDP from 2012 to 2025.

Cities

Within the urban areas, the report focuses on the top 100 cities, distinguishing between metropolitan areas and others in this group. For example, in 2012 India had 54 metropolitan cities, which together with their hinterlands (65 districts) accounted for 40 percent of GDP and 45 percent of consuming-class households. We estimate that in 2025, India will have 69 metropolitan cities, which, together with their hinterlands (79 districts), will account for 54 percent of the country’s incremental GDP from 2012 to 2025 and for 50 percent of its total income in the terminal year. In short, focusing on these 79 districts would provide companies with access to a market potential similar to that offered by the eight high-performing states (Exhibit 3).

Exhibit 3

Seventy-nine metropolitan clusters in India provide the same market size as eight high-performing states.

To get the most from this granular approach, companies need to develop customized strategies for each geographic sliver. To do so, they must map priority geographic segments to product categories and extensions. Doing so will help them reallocate their resources significantly and provide the bedrock to develop a tangible implementation road map, including the development of new competencies required for the full business (marketing, sales, and operations) to target these markets effectively. By focusing on tomorrow’s high-potential markets and tailoring strategies and allocating resources accordingly, companies can gain a significant competitive advantage.

via Understanding India’s economic geography | McKinsey & Company.

Tags: ,
30/10/2014

Burger King Brings Beef-Free Whoppers to India – India Real Time – WSJ

When Burger King BKW +0.41% brings its crown to India next month, diners will be the first in the world to bite into a new version of its signature Whopper sandwich: a beef-free one.

The world’s second-largest burger chain, behind McDonald’s MCD +0.14%,  has dropped beef and pork from its menu in India, keeping in mind religious practices of Hindus and Muslims who make for most of the country’s population.

“GREAT NEWS — The WHOPPER IS COMING SOON TO INDIA!” Burger King India’s official Facebook page announced late Wednesday. Minutes later, though, another post followed. “We do not have beef on our menu but our options will certainly delight you.”

So what’s being served on Burger King’s Indian menu? A Chicken Whopper. A Mutton Whopper. And a Vegetable Whopper.

The news didn’t go down too well with at least a few of India’s younger fast-food lovers, whose changing tastes have whipped up a market for restaurants serving beef and bacon.

“Whopper as chicken is unacceptable,” one Facebook user wrote. “That sir is not a Whopper. It looks more like a chicken sandwich trying to be cool,” another posted below a picture of Burger King’s beef-free inventions. “No beef in the menu. Seems like another sad imitation of a global franchise,” a third user posted.

Miami-based Burger King seemed unfazed by the criticism and instead sought to teach its newest customers how to correctly pronounce its flagship hamburger. (“Whaw-per” in case you’re wondering.)

It is unclear when, or how many outlets, the U.S. fast-food chain plans to open in India. Burger King declined to comment ahead of the launch.

Local media reports say the company plans to open at least 12 outlets over next three months in cities including Bangalore, Pune and Chennai. A first outlet is due in New Delhi, according to Burger King’s Indian partner, Everstone Capital Advisors. But an Everstone spokeswoman chose to remain tight-lipped about the exact location.

A photo of a neon-lit Burger King restaurant circulated online late Wednesday, along with rumors that a first store would appear in the capital city’s Select City Walk Mall. Another rumored location doing the rounds online is Connaught Place, a colonial-era marketplace in the heart of New Delhi, where Dunkin Brands Inc. and Starbucks Corp.SBUX -0.66% opened stores in 2012.

Burger King comes to India a few months after Fatburger Inc. and nearly two decades after its arch-rival McDonalds, which offers the McAloo Tikki burger (a potato-burger, basically), as well as the Maharaja Mac, its beef-free take on the Big Mac. Last year, McDonalds opened a vegetarian-only outlet in northern India — a world-wide first — in an attempt to cater to the country’s vast vegetarian population. Fast-food chains like Dominos and Subway have also tailored their menu to serve spicier, and plenty of vegetarian, options.

India’s burgeoning fast-food market — home to 299 KFCs, more than 300 Pizza Hut outlets and four Taco Bells — is expected to grow to $78 billion by 2018, according to Technopak Advisors. The Gurgaon-based market-research firm values the current market at $48 billion.

The Asia Pacific region is Burger King’s smallest market, with approximately 1,100 restaurants. The U.S. and Canada continue to remain its largest, with more than 7,400 restaurants out its 13,667 globally.

via Burger King Brings Beef-Free Whoppers to India – India Real Time – WSJ.

29/10/2014

Pollution in Delhi Prompts U.S. Embassy Warning – India Real Time – WSJ

If you have children in New Delhi, you might not want to let them play outside today. The U.S. Embassy in the Indian capital said air quality – as measured at a monitoring station in the embassy compound – had reached “very unhealthy” levels on Wednesday morning.

On Wednesday at 10 a.m., the embassy said its air-quality index was 255 – a measure based on the amount of fine particulate, or PM 2.5, in the air. Such small particulates can enter the lungs and blood stream. They have been linked to severe health problems such as lung cancer.

The U.S. Embassy’s website said that an air-quality index reading between 201 and 300 can cause “significant aggravation of heart or lung disease” and a “significant increase in respiratory effects in general population.”

“Older adults and children should avoid all physical activity outdoors,” it said. “Everyone else should avoid prolonged or heavy exertion.”

The message though hadn’t got through to the American Embassy School in Delhi on Wednesday morning. Kailash Sharma, a staff member at the school, which is located across the road from the embassy, said by telephone that “kids were playing outside.”

The U.S. embassy in Beijing, China, also monitors air pollution.

Delhi’s air quality often deteriorates in winter, particularly in the days after the festival of Diwali when residue from fireworks displays adds to pollution levels.

India’s Ministry of Earth Sciences on Wednesday said its air-quality index was 121, a level described as “poor.”

via Pollution in Delhi Prompts U.S. Embassy Warning – India Real Time – WSJ.

28/10/2014

Softbank invests $840M in India tech companies – Businessweek

Japanese telecommunications company Softbank Corp. is investing nearly $840 million in two technology companies in India, eyeing what it sees as a lucrative market for growth.
Embed from Getty Images

Softbank said Tuesday it is investing $627 million and becoming the biggest shareholder in Snapdeal, the largest digital marketplace in India with 25 million users and 50,000 businesses. It brings together products from thousands of big and small brands.

The Tokyo-based company, which recently acquired Sprint in the U.S., is also investing $210 million in Ola Cabs, which runs the technology to connect consumers with cab drivers in India.

Softbank executives said they were banking on India because it has a large number of Internet users, the online market is not yet saturated and connection speeds are likely to get faster.

via Softbank invests $840M in India tech companies – Businessweek.

28/10/2014

Britain’s PM David Cameron Unveils Encyclopedia of Hinduism – India Real Time – WSJ

British Prime Minister David Cameron held a Diwali party in London to launch the new Encyclopedia of Hinduism, as his Conservative Party attempts to strengthen relations with the country’s large Indian community ahead of national elections next year.

The encyclopedia, which took 25 years to compile, contains 11 volumes and is published by the India Heritage Research Foundation, a nonprofit founded by Pujya Swami Chidanand Saraswati, head of the largest ashram in Rishikesh, a town in northern India.

More than 1,000 guests attended the unveiling of book in Westminster, near the Houses of Parliament. The event was organized by the United Kingdom’s ruling Conservative Party and the Conservative Party Friends of India among others.

Mr. Cameron and his wife Samantha lit a diya, or lamp, at the Diwali party that coincided with the book launch.

Andrew Feldman, chairman of the Conservative Party, said that the book, a product of research by 1,000 scholars, was a “phenomenal achievement.”

“The party wants to deepen and broaden our links with the British Indian community and with India and this event is one important step on our journey,” Lord Feldman said, according to a statement released after the event.

via Britain’s PM David Cameron Unveils Encyclopedia of Hinduism – India Real Time – WSJ.

Law of Unintended Consequences

continuously updated blog about China & India

ChiaHou's Book Reviews

continuously updated blog about China & India

What's wrong with the world; and its economy

continuously updated blog about China & India