financiallinkdirectory.com
Web Directory | Submit Article | Suggest Link | Register
Real Estate | Home Equity Loan | Debt Consolidation
 
Google
Google Financial Directory


Quick Submit Link

 
Bankruptcy
Credit Card Debt
Consumer Credit Counseling
Debt Consolidation
Foreclosure
Home Equity Loan
Insurance
Real Estate
Stop Foreclosure
Unsecure Debt Consolidation
 
 
 
Accounting (10)
Bankruptcy (6)
Banks and Lending Institutions (5)
Bonds (4)
Consumer Credit Counseling (7)
Credit Card Debt (12)
Debt Consolidation (13)
Home Equity Loan (4)
Home Mortgage (7)
Real Estate (6)
Stop Foreclosure (6)
 
 

Truth or Dare
Do we really want the unvarnished truth from someone running a financial institution? Predicting a collapse is likely to be self-fulfilling.

Crunch Still On, Banks Stay Tight
Canceled deals are a reminder of how little Wall Street is willing to lend.

Here Comes Carbox
The combination of carbon footprints and Sarbanes-Oxley has corporate America running scared--creating a boom for consultants.

It's All About Who You Know
With energy costs skyrocketing, Dow Chemical has found it's nice to have friends in the oil and gas business.

Sponsor's Content: Power to Your People, Money in Your Pocket
Companies that enable employees to make decisions are three times more successful than competitors. Find out why.

 

Into Africa
One intrepid investor sees numerous value opportunities despite the content's turbulent politics.

Great Gulf
The same oil prices roiling markets from California to Kolkata are flooding the Arabian Gulf with cash. You can buy in to this boom.

Southern Sanctuary
Want to be far from terrorism threats and have Bill Gates as a neighbor? Then New Zealand may be the place for you.

Rebuilding China
If you must invest in the overpriced Chinese market, go for one of the least glamorous sectors. Cement, for example.

Sponsor's Content: Power to Your People, Money in Your Pocket
Companies that enable employees to make decisions are three times more successful than competitors. Find out why.

 
Article Description
 
  India Growth Story
  Home » Investing

 

The Growth Story

 

 

has come out with robust growth of around 9%, is it because of reforms? Or global payer?  Or is it our loose fiscal and monetary policy? What are the fundamental changes which are responsible for ’s rapid growth?

Economists, as usual, seek practical and verifiable answers; and we shun cultural and sociological reasoning whenever possible. But I think it is a more powerful force which has been guiding all the recent changes in , the risk taking ability of youth.

 

 

Risk is indeed an economic concept – and an often measured one. It is usually applied to an individual’s risk aversion; a company or a country’s risk-premium; and generally for all significant financial transactions. What I’m trying to refer to, however, is a far broader change in the way Indians perceive risk, and how we respond to it.

Firstly – in what is now a common refrain – the private sector has completely transformed. Not only the private sector, the public sector enterprises have also drastically changed the way they work. Managers are beginning to accept the idea of relinquishing control, and are looking for creative sources of capital. Companies are getting aggressive with their expansion plans – sometimes too aggressive. Some corporates have even picked up a taste for overseas acquisitions(TATA`s). There is an unmeasured commonality to all of this. Marketing gurus would call it “renewed self confidence”; cynics would call it dumb luck; I call it ‘taking risks’.

Now the risk tolerance is not confined to the merchants of wealth alone – it is gradually beginning to infect the government too. Begrudgingly, it is either internally corporatizing; listening to outside voices and sharing responsibility; or in some cases, completely moving out of the way in areas where it knows it is underperforming: infrastructure, finance, education, health. Its manner of doing so is bumbling and idiotic (for instance the recent SEZ debacle), but the change in its intention is mostly clear. Of course, our politicians have fickle wills so that could quickly change – were it not for the third, and most important observation.

Indian families and individuals, are also becoming bigger risk takers, now they prefer investing in stock markets rather than putting their money in banks & post office deposits.  I am a tail-ender in the great reverse migration – expats returning to to take advantage of the new opportunities that are coming available. Two or three years ago, that was impossible. Today, for young people, the potential long-term rewards of returning to fast-growing could be far greater than those from working on an overstretched Wall Street.

More fascinating than even the NRIs’ new risky behavior are the choices being made by the people I know in . With more careers for their kids to choose from, parents from all income strata are seeing the value of a good and practical education and bypassing the government when necessary. Other examples abound: people are travelling a lot more for work, women are gradually entering the labor force.

The introduction of the culture of risk at this grassroot level ensures that all the other pieces move – that the government and companies are given the message to change. This new inflexion point in our behavior is at least partially the result of the burgeoning young population. And no one can really doubt that it is the old guard who are reluctant to admit that the doctrine of governing a society through babudom has lost.

Also with increase in the income levels due to the outsourcing industry the living standard & consumption is incresing rapidly which indeed is increasing the growth rate. So we can conclude that the Indian youth is the fountainhead of this growth and we need the participation of the youth to sustain this growth.

 

 

Author Shail Mehta

www.bullrider.in

 

 

 



  
  << Back