FDI in Retail in India --- Incredible Myth or Plausible Reality
FDI
in retail (100% in multi-brands) is our current national obsession. To some (read
middlemen/ traders lobby) it would be a calamity, will create massive
unemployment, increase inflation, bring misery to the millions, mostly poor, in
this country and, therefore, totally unwelcome. To many (the much-harassed
consumers, high-end farmers and corporates) it would be a much-needed
revolutionary step in the right direction, just a trifle short of panacea. But
first the facts and the ground-realities.
India
has nearly 600 million farmers, 1200 million consumers and 5 million traders.
In a written reply to the Parliament in April, 2012, it has been stated by the
Government that India is now World's 2nd largest producer of Vegetables and
Fruits after China with a total production of 77.52 million tons of fruits and
149.61 million tons of vegetables in 2011-12. During 2010-11, we also exported
vegetables and fruits to many countries to the tune of Rs. 3856 crores (US $
760 million). However, if we care to read a report of Central Institute for
Post Harvest Engineering and Technology, Ludhiana published in 2010 it says
that nearly 18% of our vegetables and fruits production worth Rs.44000 crores
(US$ 8 billion)are wasted annually due to lack of cold storage facilities and other
factors. For such a huge country like India there are only 5400 cold storages
with nearly half of them in UP, Punjab and W. Bengal. 4875 of these belong to
the private sector, 400 run by the co-operatives and only 125 by the public
sector units. As stated by the union Minister of state for Food and Agriculture
only 2% of the total horticulture production in the country is being processed
now as compared to 15% in China and 8% in the Asia-Pacific countries. For a
country with over 300 million people below poverty line this loss is colossal
and avoidable. The absence of a farm to fork retail policy compels the
consumers to pay a heavy premium for shortages and wastages.
The
stranglehold of middlemen and greedy traders is at the root of rural poverty
and a major cause for the pathetic condition of the farmers all over India.
Fruits and vegetables which are perishable commodities pass through 5 to 6
layers of middlemen and due to addition of margin at every stage there is a
huge difference in the farm gate, wholesale and retail price. So a humble
potato for which a humbler farmer has to console himself with a price of Rs 2 a
Kilogram will cost the consumer ,the last link of this complex chain,
anything between Rs 10 to 12. A cool profit of 600% to the dreaded middlemen
blessed with a Midas touch. The middlemen and some traders are responsible for
hoarding and black marketeering to a great extent.
Indian
farmer who has earned a good name for his innovative skills, fortitude and immense
capacity to work hard in adverse conditions not only in his own country but over
a dozen countries in the Asia, Africa, Caribbean and North America fails to get a fair price for his toils and sustained labour at home even after
65 years of Independence. Every year they are fleeced by the unscrupulous
middlemen and traders as neither the farmers/producers nor various government
agencies are in a position to ensure proper marketing of products. The only
practical solution to mitigate their plight is direct and bulk purchase by the
large retailers.
This
is why we need 100% FDI in multi-brand food-based retail. Contrary to what
the skeptics may say even they know within their hearts that the foreign
retailers would bring back-end infrastructure via: - cold chains, refrigeration, packaging, storage, transportation and introduce much-needed
efficiency and modern practices in the supply and distribution chain. They will
procure in bulk and sell at competitive price. Their entry will promote
agricultural growth by increasing farmers income, creating efficient
Small and Medium Industries, providing several million jobs in the small
and medium industries as well as logistics sectors for both the skilled and
unskilled unemployed, enhance manpower and skill development, bring additional
revenue to the exchequer, save massive wastage which would become available for
domestic use/exports. Surely, the big MNC giants like Wal-Mart, Tesco, Carrefour
and others are not coming to India for charity. They too will make profit but
not even remotely comparable to what the Indian middlemen/traders are making.
Further, they would not dare to sell the consumer sub-standard or adulterated
foodstuff or pesticide-ridden fruits and vegetables. The unhygienic conditions
of the shops and problem of under-weighing would also disappear. All these
benefits will accrue to the consumers.
Some
of the countries who have benefited by allowing 100% FDI in retail include China,
Russia, Indonesia, Thailand, South Africa, Brazil and Argentina. However,
before taking a plunge the government will have to evolve clear-cut
policies that provides a level-playing field to foreign and Indian big players
and protect small retailers by having a legal framework that prohibits retail giants,
both Indian and foreign, to indulge in predatory pricing and other unethical
practices. Since the predominant retail (up to 98%) is in the unorganized
sector and consists of Mom and Pop shops, convenience (Kirana) stores, street
hawkers, peddlers on the wheels and pavements, village markets, it is
imperative that an enforcement mechanism is in place to
ensure that small retailers are not dislocated by unfair means by the large
ones. In particular, the foreign investors should be asked to make a real
contribution to the development of infrastructure, logistics and agro-processing
units. Then, it would be a win-win situation for everyone except the middlemen.
The farmer gets a better price for his labour, consumers pay lesser price for a
quality product with more variety to choose from. For the Small retailer it
would be business as usual with a smaller margin but higher productivity and
better services. The government earns more revenue and the nation and its
people get world-class infrastructure.
FDI
in multi-brand retail which could be one of the sunrise sectors for the Indian
economy is a political hot potato right now and major opposition parties would
love to upset Congress's apple cart if it finally decides to go ahead. It would
be a tad difficult to evolve a political consensus and get all political parties
on board. But for the ruling party suffering from the ill-effects of one scam
after another in the last 3 years, election reverses in several states,
acquiring dubious tags of '' policy paralysis'',
''direction-less'', ''underachiever'' and the next general election
looming large, it would be a good idea to bite the bullet on this
thorny issue. They should engage with every party and try to get this through
by consensus, if possible.
Who knows they might repeat their performance of July 2008 on Indo-US Nuclear
deal. If their pull, pressure and persuasion work with the usual suspects, they
will triumph and the win would energise their demoralised cadre. The main
opposition party should handle this issue with gravitas. Any faux pax and they
would be reduced to calling the clinched FDI deal as sour grapes. In the bargain,
they would also lose a large chunk of their main supporters - urban middle
class.
Hi,
ReplyDeletePunch into google search WALMART IS NOT GOOD FOR INDIA- VADAKAYIL.
Chetan bhagat is the latest Zionist stooge , for pushing FDI in multibrand retail. Amartya Sen with a Rothschild wife, has tried and failed.
Capt ajit vadakayil
..
Dear Capt Ajit,
ReplyDeleteWould suggest read my blog again and slowly.
Thanks,
RK Singh,
IFS(Retd)
Thank you very much for a well researched blog. A bold measure by the present Government could make a major difference to the real stake holders.
ReplyDeleteArticulate and more importantly backed by accurate research, this piece is a non-biased representation of the FDI (in retail) chaos in our country. I look forward to more of your work!
ReplyDeleteHi Sir,
ReplyDeleteThanks for good information.I have also subscribed to +ve angle of this by seeing some restrictive provisions which will help domestic small vendors.In one news paper i have seen below comment,can you make me to understand what is the rationale behind this.
comment:
State government’s prerogative: Very cleverly, the Central government has allowed the State governments the final say in allowing FDI in retail. This may to some extent pacify those State governments opposed to big retail. However, the industry is upbeat and knows well that as per international trade norms, member countries have to provide national treatment. Being a signatory to Bilateral Investment promotion and Protection Agreements (BIPAs), India has to provide national treatment to the investors. Agreements with more than 70 countries have already been signed. State governments will, therefore, have to open up for big retail. Industries will use the legal option to force the States to comply.
To me this argument seems to be a red herring.As of today,there would be 2 categories of States. Those who will go for 100% FDI in multi-brand retails ( Mostly UPA ruled) and those who will not. Wal-mart and others cannot force any state government to comply in this matter. It would be their choice.But ultimately most of them will welcome the MNCs for the obvious benefit to farmers,consumers and their respective economies.
Delete