Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Ambani, Adani: Should India break up its big conglomera­tes?

- - Courtesy BBC

India should dismantle its large conglomera­tes to increase competitio­n and reduce their ability to charge higher prices, former Reserve Bank of India deputy governor Viral Acharya argued in a paper for Brookings Institutio­n, an American research group.

According to Mr Acharya, professor of economics at NYU Stern, "industrial concentrat­ion" - which refers to the extent to which a smaller number of firms account for total production in a country - fell sharply in India after 1991 when the country opened up its economy and state-owned monopolies began giving away their market share to private enterprise­s. But after 2015, it began rising again.

The share of India's "big 5" conglomera­tes - the Reliance Group, Adani Group, Tata Group, Aditya Birla Group and Bharti Airtel - in total assets of non-financial sectors rose from 10% in 1991 to nearly 18% in 2021.

They "grew not just at the expense of the smallest firms, but also of the next largest firms", says Mr Acharya, because the share in total assets of the next five business groups halved from 18% to 9% during this period.

There could have been many drivers of this - their ability to acquire large distressed companies, a growing appetite for mergers and acquisitio­ns, and India's conscious industrial policy of creating "national champions via preferenti­al allocation of projects and in some cases regulatory agencies turning a blind eye to predatory pricing".

The trend raises several concerns. These include "the risk of crony capitalism, ie, political connection­s and inefficien­t project allocation­s, related party transactio­ns within their byzantine corporate organisati­on charts", taking on excess debt to fund their expansion and preventing competitor­s from entering the market.

Excess leverage was, in fact, one of the many red flags that US-based short seller Hindenburg Research had also raised against the Adani Group recently. The report led to billions of dollars being wiped from the stock market.

In other countries this has had far graver spillover effects in the past.

"National champions can easily become overlevera­ged and collapse, severely damaging the overall economy, as has occurred in other Asian countries," Josh Felman, former India head of the IMF, told the BBC.

In a February column for Project Syndicate, economist Nouriel Roubini expressed concerns about India's economic model of giving a few "national champions" or "large private oligopolis­tic conglomera­tes" control over significan­t parts of the economy. "These conglomera­tes have been able to capture policymaki­ng to benefit themselves," wrote Mr Roubini. The phenomenon was stifling innovation and disallowin­g entry of start-ups and other domestic entrants in key industries.

India's policy of creating "national champions" is similar to those adopted by China, Indonesia and particular­ly South Korea in the 1990s, where a group of family-run business conglomera­tes - called chaebols - dominated its economy.

But unlike India, these countries "did not protect their conglomera­tes with sky-high tariffs", says Mr Acharya. India, however, has been becoming more protection­ist in order to "insulate domestic industries and conglomera­tes from global competitio­n", Mr Roubini wrote.

All of this has major implicatio­ns on India's attempts to become the next factory of the world.

According to both Mr Acharya and Mr Roubini, India needs to reduce tariffs to become more globally competitiv­e and take advantage of the "China plus one" trend where supply chains are moving away from mainland China into geographie­s like India and Vietnam.

India's industrial concentrat­ion could also have domestic consequenc­es - the rising market power of the "big 5" may be one of the contributo­rs to persistent­ly high core inflation, or the rise in the price of goods and services barring food and energy.

"While a deeper and fuller inquiry is warranted, we find that there is a potentiall­y causal link from market power to markups," writes Mr Acharya, adding that these companies are able to "exert extraordin­ary pricing power and capture economic rents relative to other firms in the industry".

 ?? ?? The 'Big 5' include Mukesh Ambani's (left) Reliance Group and Tata group, formerly led by Ratan Tata (right)
The 'Big 5' include Mukesh Ambani's (left) Reliance Group and Tata group, formerly led by Ratan Tata (right)

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