Arab Times

India’s economy slows

Once thriving manufactur­ing stalls

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NEW DELHI, Sept 16, (AP): Anuj Kapoor took over his father’s booming auto parts business in 2012, hoping to elevate the company from selling to suppliers to selling directly to carmakers.

Seven years later, he’s had to lay off half his workers as drooping sales caused his profit to plummet by at least 80%.

Confidence in the Indian economy is giving way to uncertaint­y as growth in the labor-intensive manufactur­ing sector has come to a near standstill, braking to 0.6% in the last quarter from 12.1% in the same period a year earlier.

The economy grew at its slowest annual pace in six years in April-June, 5%. Many economists believe Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s signature economic policies are at least partly to blame.

A surprise demonetiza­tion in 2018 and the hasty rollout of a goods and services tax were dire blows to manufactur­ing, especially the auto industry. The fourth largest in the world, it’s a pillar of the Indian economy, contributi­ng 7.5% to the country’s GDP.

The industry employs almost 37 million people and is on its way to shedding as many as a million jobs in the months ahead because of declining sales, according to the Auto Component Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of India.

Car deliveries in August dropped 41% from a year earlier, truck and bus sales fell 39% and motorcycle sales, a key indicator of the health of the economy in rural India, sank 22%.

“This is a trickle-down impact of the slowdown,” said the associatio­n’s director general Vinnie Mehta.

No segment of the industry has been spared. India’s biggest carmaker, Maruti, has laid off 3,000 temporary employees and shut down two of its plants for two days.

The 15 workers in Kapoor’s plant in a Delhi suburb make clutch buttons used in heavy duty trucks and tractors.

The first hit came in November 2016, when Modi decided to pull 86% of cash out of circulatio­n to undermine black markets. At the time, nearly all transactio­ns in India were conducted in cash. Seven months later, Modi’s government introduced a GST, goods and services tax, forcing small businesses like Kapoor’s to quickly digitize their payment systems.

Mid-size and small businesses, the backbone of much of India’s economy, are still suffering from the combined consequenc­es of both reforms, economists say.

India’s unemployme­nt rate was 3.4% when the GST was introduced in July 2017. As of the end of August, it was 8.4%, according to the Centre for Monitoring the Indian Economy, a Mumbai-based research firm.

“The auto components market still functions without any billing system and more than 50% of our market is still cash-driven,” said Kapoor. “How do we file tax returns when sellers don’t give us any bills?”

The sudden demonetiza­tion was the “biggest policy mistake of independen­t India,” says Jayati Ghosh, an economist at Jawaharlal Nehru University in Delhi. It drasticall­y reduced consumptio­n - the bedrock of India’s economy - “because people had no cash to pay.”

Supply chains, production and job markets were all disrupted, Ghosh said.

Measures of consumer confidence have weakened amid growing pessimism over jobs and the economy in general.

“Demonetiza­tion pulled the rug under the feet of India’s cash economy and the informal sector was the worst hit. The much-hyped reform triggered the current economic slowdown,” said Dr. Pronab Sen, India’s former chief economic adviser and the director of the India program at the London School of Economics’ Internatio­nal Growth Center.

Instead of improving government finances, the GST and demonetiza­tion have undermined India’s financial stability.

To counter that, in August the Reserve Bank of India transferre­d $24 billion to the cash-starved government to help support stimulus measures, prompting criticism from opposition parties that it compromise­d the central bank’s autonomy.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman recently announced piecemeal policy reforms to stimulate the economy.

“We are conscious that we need to respond,” she said.

Even getting a clear picture of the overall economy is a challenge for policymake­rs given the huge size of India’s informal economy of day laborers and small businesses.

For workers with no guarantee of a paycheck or other protection­s, the slowdown can mean just going hungry. Such troubles were evident on a recent morning at a worker pickup area about 25 kilometers (15 miles) east of Delhi.

Mohammad Shamshad, a day laborer who moved his wife and three children from the northeaste­rn region of Uttar Pradesh to the Delhi region a decade ago, says he used to make nearly $200 a month - enough to feed his family and pay for schooling.

Now, he spends more time standing on a corner waiting for jobs than he does working, and averages less than half that amount.

“There is work for a day or two, and then nothing for the next five days,” he said. “Some days we have to sleep (on an) empty stomach.”

 ??  ?? In this file photo, Indian daily wage laborers and constructi­on workers jostle as a man, in red shirt, tries to hire them, on the outskirts of New Delhi, India. Confidence in the Indian economy is giving way to uncertaint­y as growth in the labor-intensive manufactur­ing sector has come to a near standstill, braking to 0.6% in the last quarter from
12.1% in the same period a year earlier.
In this file photo, Indian daily wage laborers and constructi­on workers jostle as a man, in red shirt, tries to hire them, on the outskirts of New Delhi, India. Confidence in the Indian economy is giving way to uncertaint­y as growth in the labor-intensive manufactur­ing sector has come to a near standstill, braking to 0.6% in the last quarter from 12.1% in the same period a year earlier.

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