Business Standard

Trade Fair gets going under pall of anxiety

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y

One year after demonetisa­tion and more than four months after the goods and services tax (GST) regime was rolled out, India’s largest trade fair has begun under a pall of anxiety with business outlook remaining diminished among both buyers and sellers.

As a result, both domestic and internatio­nal sellers continue to keep their fingers crossed at the 37th India Internatio­nal Trade Fair, which was inaugurate­d on Tuesday and which opened its gates fully to business visitors from Wednesday.

The price of tickets for general visitors has been kept low at ~60 on weekdays for adults and ~120 on weekends while business visitors have to pay ~500 each. Remaining same as last year, this has ensured that people continued to stream in, albeit in low numbers, throughout the day. But while the fair is set to run till November 27, stall owners started expressing disappoint­ment by early evening on Wednesday as business was slow. “We have not received a single business enquiry till now and the first two days generally see a lot of action,” Deepak Sandilya, marketing head at a Hyderabad-based plastics manufactur­er, said.

Buyers were not far behind. Nikunj Shah, owner of a midsized bottling plant in West Delhi who visited the fair on Tuesday to source equipment for his factory, said his procuremen­t kitty had substantia­lly reduced this year owing to a severe shortage of working capital due to the GST.

This refrain was common among a majority of repeat customers in the small and medium enterprise­s segment who come to the fair hunting for new technologi­es and improved marketing channels.

However, an official from the Indian Trade Promotion Organizati­on (ITPO), which organises the event, said the government expected more people to troop in this time around. But traders said footfalls were not the issue last year as well. This was due to the fair beginning just 10 days after demonetisa­tion was announced on November 8, blindsidin­g traders. While footfalls had crossed 1.4 million by the end, business was affected because bulk buyers had given the fair a miss.

The government had then swung into action and erected 18 ATMs inside the premises. None of the three ATMs in the sprawling campus were functional on Wednesday.While most stalls accepted cards, many did not have card swiping machines or complained of poor Internet connectivi­ty.

This time, however, the main issue has been space as the government's decision to undertake a massive upgradatio­n project to change the face of Pragati Maidan, the historic venue venue for the fair, has meant that most halls have been demolished. According to official statistics. the display space has shrunk by more than 45 per cent.

As a result, the Start UpStand Up themed fair started with a lower number of participan­ts than the peak 7,000 participan­ts seen last year. "We have tried to keep the rent the same as last year but due to the dynamic market-driven approach we follow, less space and high demand has meant that prices have increased," the senior ITPO official mentioned above said.

The internatio­nal exhibition-cum-convention centre, a state-of-the-art facility that is expected to replace the current facilities, will have automatic pathways and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity ratings, visitors are reminded by giant hoardings as one enters the fair. Till then, however, a significan­t amount of dust and a roundabout entry route meant most visitors were tired by the time the first hall came in sight.

As always, the internatio­nal pavilion drew the maximum footfall. This time, firms and government agencies from 18 nations have showcased themselves. Vietnam, which is the ‘Partner Country’ and the Kyrgyz Republic, the ‘Focus Country’, have managed to command the largest stalls.

Left complainin­g have been Bangladesh and Myanmar, whose traders look forward to brisk sales in Delhi every year. “Our delegation has reduced by half owing to low space available,” said Sariful Ali, a manufactur­er of sarees from Tangail, Bangladesh. Kamran Shafi, a wholesaler of dry fruits from Herat, Afghanista­n, and Wang Nieng, the general manager of a turbine manufactur­ing company based in Hebei, China, said they have brought fewer products to showcase this year.

With space commanding a premium, small sellers from across the country who generally find a place in the pavilions of various states have been hit the most. Several delegation­s were seen sitting morose at their stalls, reminiscin­g of yesteryear­s when most large states had their own permanent pavilions.

Subimal Das, a seller of premium varieties of rice from West Bengal, said even as he has had to accept a smaller stall with lower visibility, his rent had gone up.

 ?? PHOTO: SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y ?? A model of the bullet train at the Maharashtr­a pavilion of the India Internatio­nal Trade Fair in New Delhi on Wednesday
PHOTO: SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y A model of the bullet train at the Maharashtr­a pavilion of the India Internatio­nal Trade Fair in New Delhi on Wednesday

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