Business Standard

India’s Detroit ‘struggles’ as new states become growth drivers

- IAIN MARLOW, GANESH NAGARAJAN & ARCHANA CHAUDHARY 6 December

It’s quiet as Ruchak Khanter walks across his factory in the southern Indian city of Chennai. Stacked piles of unsold stainless steel plates, trays and bowls cover the floor, industrial stamping machines lay idle and most of his workers have been sent home.

“There’s literally no work,” Khanter said, citing the new nationwide goods and services tax (GST) and the decline in his state’s competitiv­eness as others regions lure investment. He’s considerin­g moving to Ahmedabad in Gujarat, some 1,850 km to the north. “A lot of industries have already shifted.”

Nicknamed the “Detroit of India” for its auto industry, Chennai, the capital of Tamil Nadu, is at risk of taking on another characteri­stic of the American city — the demise of a manufactur­ing powerhouse. For India as a whole though, the ascent of less developed states could spell a future of more balanced, sustainabl­e growth where regional rivalries fuel productivi­ty gains, much as they have in the other giant economies of the US and China.

“For a host of reasons, parts of South India developed more rapidly than the northern states postindepe­ndence,” said Shailesh Kumar, senior Asia analyst at Eurasia Group, a political risk firm. “This trend may now be changing on account of the government’s push to have states compete for business and investment­s, with the goal that in the end all of India will benefit.” Andhra Pradesh and the newly-formed state of Telangana are among the fiercest competitor­s for new industry. With huge tracts of rural land available, they can bid aggressive­ly for new industry, said Venu Srinivasan, Chennai-based chairman of Sundaram Clayton, majority owner of TVS Motor . “The growth in Andhra and Telangana is amazing,” Srinivasan said. Chief Minister Chandrabab­u Naidu is tapping into Andhra Pradesh’s tech prowess to try and make their built-from-scratch capital Amaravati a Singapore-style “fintech” centre of India. “This is our strength,” said J A Chowdary, the state’s special chief secretary.

India’s states, particular­ly Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, are “engaged in a very healthy sort of competitio­n, in terms of governance in general, in terms of attracting investment, in terms of building infrastruc­ture,” said Viswanatha­n Raghunatha­n, a business professor and author based in Hyderabad.

For Prime Minister Narendra Modi, more balanced growth across the nation of 1.3 billion would help fulfill his 2014 campaign promise to bring economic developmen­t to all Indians — a pledge now under pressure from a lack of job creation. But as a former chief minister himself, Modi knows competitio­n between states can lead to new investment­s and job creation, and he has tried to level the playing field by implementi­ng national policies such as GST.

Diminishin­gp ower

That’s little comfort to businesses in Tamil Nadu, India’s most industrial­ised state and long a destinatio­n for global manufactur­ers. Political shifts and policies such as the GST have dented the region’s momentum, while a drop in remittance­s from workers in the Gulf has been most notable here.

“The south was a powerhouse for industry,” said N K Ranganath, managing director of Grundfos Pumps India, a division of Denmarkbas­ed Grundfos AS, in his Chennai office. “But over a period of time, that is kind of diminishin­g.”

Tamil Nadu’s industries minister, M C Sampath, said it was only a “rumor” that industries were leaving his state. “We are alert,” he said in an interview on November 6, citing a planned investment by PSA Group, the maker of Peugeot and Citroen cars, in his state. “This is the best place to do business in the country.” Planned investment­s in Tamil Nadu still totaled $5.7 billion since 2015, with a recent uptick “despite ongoing political uncertaint­ies,” according to global real estate firm Jones Lang LaSalle Inc.

Southern might

India’s southern states — Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Kerala and Karnataka — have long enjoyed better social indicators than poor northern states such as Bihar or Uttar Pradesh. Numbers tell the story: Andhra Pradesh, with a population of 50 million, has more factories than Uttar Pradesh, home to more than 200 million people. The challenge they face is the same for fading industrial regions the world over — to shift from lower-wage assembly to higher-value manufactur­ing and research and developmen­t. “You need to move up the value chain,” said Jayan Jose Thomas, an economist serving on Kerala’s planning board. “That transition is not easy.”

Even in the south’s famed IT outsourcin­g industry, all is not well. Worth $154 billion in 2017, according to the National Associatio­n of Software and Services Companies, the sector has been hit by job losses in some of its largest firms. Some blame US President Donald Trump’s attacks on the H1B visa, the gateway for a steady stream of IT profession­als to the US Others put it down to uncertaint­y about the effects of the policy changes and the shift to automation and focus on higher-value work. V P Senthil Kumar, whose firm provides IT hardware to firms including Hyundai and Tata Consultanc­y Services, said business crashed 80 per cent since the GST introducti­on. Hundreds of products he supplies fall under different rates, including an 18 per cent tax for monitors smaller than 17-inches and a 28 per cent rate for larger ones. “Nobody wants to invest because there’s no clarity,” Kumar said. For some, the transition up the value chain means hiring less people — a solution that compounds India’s low-and-under employment problem.

Virendra Bhayani, whose family owns Bhupendra Internatio­nal, an exporter of plastic housewares, installed expensive machinery and now employ just 15 workers, down from 30. “We are in a transition,” Bhayani said. “The industry is going through a lot of changes.”

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