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Thursday, November 09, 2006India's Economy - Why Go With India Over China
China on the other hand has very active central and local governments directing economic activity. It has taken the legacy of its planned economic system and modified it to suit the new environment, which it claims is "market driven." While planned and directed investments have the ability to create China's "wow" affect, it exponentially increases the potential for mal-investments and gross misallocations of capital. Look at the old Soviet Union. History has shown us repeatedly that although the market is an unpleasant mechanism of capital allocation, it is phenomenally better than any individual or groups of individuals at it. When one visits China, the first thing that catches the eye is the world-class and large-scale infrastructure. About India's infrastructure, unlike China, India has grossly under-invested in infrastructure. Everything in India is full. But the reality of the situation today is that India is putting infrastructure in place. It is still not government directed; all infrastructure investments have some element of private participation and are driven by return considerations. That is why India is building the remunerative infrastructure (telecom, power, ports, airports, buildings) more rapidly than the less remunerative ones (roads and urban civic infrastructure). Intellectual Property: The Chinese understand physical assets and commodities. They just don't understand the knowledge industry and intellectual capital. India is miles ahead of China in the development of its knowledge industry. While the Chinese score over the Indians in basic primary education, India is miles ahead in higher education. India has vibrant IT-, Pharmaceutical- and Engineering-based knowledge industries. Indians understand branding and consumer choice. It has a vibrant music and entertainment industry. Its media and advertising industries are world class. 50% of India's GDP comprises services. China on the other hand commoditize everything. It does not nurture innovation and is driven by imitation of foreign R&D. China is goods, India is services. Sound banking and monetary system: One out of two loans in China is probably bad. India, on the other hand, has net NPLs [non-performing loans] in its banking system of 3.5%. China's bad loan problem is a legacy of its state-directed lending practices. Interest rates are completely controlled by the PboC, and the big four banks that control over 95% of banking assets have no credit scoring or credit risk based pricing mechanisms in place. It's unbelievable. India on the other hand has a vibrant domestic credit market with an active corporate and government bond market and interest rate and credit derivative markets. Indian interest rates are market determined, and the banking system definitely knows how to price credit. China's asset markets are very similar to the Japanese. They are very heavily leveraged and are primarily fueled by property speculation. The Chinese property market coupled with its leveraged and insolvent banking system is a very big accident waiting to happen. India has no such issues. Entrepreneurship and profit motivation: The drivers of economic activity in China are the state-owned enterprises, the quasi-state owned enterprises, and foreign enterprises. While the Chinese are phenomenal entrepreneurs abroad, inside China they [entrepreneurs] are a minority. India is totally and completely private-enterprise driven. Entrepreneurship permeates the Indian social fabric to the grass roots. India has the second highest number of entrepreneurs per capita after Thailand, and given its population, it has the highest number of entrepreneurs in the world. There are over 6,000 companies listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange, and one finds a representation of every imagined economic activity. There is only one thing that drives the Indian entrepreneur and that is 'Profit.' That is more than can be said about China. China has a history of dubious economic objectives and has been known to create gross mal-investments in its quest for global supremacy in a given sector, industry or product. These factors in our understanding make India a more tenable place for sustainable economic development and activity. Again, India versus China…why ? Yes, India. There are short-term factors as well that make it attractive. The first is India's well developed financial system. India has a large and active domestic retail and institutional investor base. The investing public understands the market system. As a foreigner, you want to be able to exit the market. In China, it's hard. The Chinese stock markets are a recent development. China does not have a developed investor base, and there are numerous structural problems, to say it politely. The Bombay Stock Exchange, founded in the 1870s, is the oldest stock exchange in Asia. With 6,000 companies listed from every imaginable industry, it's simply easier to participate in India's growth. China does not have nearly as many stocks listed and the representation is very narrow. A disproportionate share of its market cap is taken up by state-owned enterprises. The other big plus in India's favor right now is its relatively low export dependence. Only 10% of India's economy is dependent on international trade versus 40-50% of China's economy. India also has numerous listed companies that are participating in its domestic growth. There are numerous opportunities in small and mid-cap stocks here. If it is well thought…if there is a problem in the western consumption economies, China will be impacted severely. While India may be impacted in the immediate aftermath, for sure money will flow to India. Thanks to http://www.investmentu.com. Labels: stories
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