JLL India's top leadership Attends WEF India Economic Summit 2016 in New Delhi
Sharp Focus on India’s
Fourth Industrial Revolution
As exclusive
real estate partners to the World Economic Forum - the
renowned international institution for public-private cooperation –
international property consultancy JLL is an active
participant at WEF meetings across the world. Anuj Puri, Chairman &
Country Head, JLL India has been a regular delegate at the annual WEF
winter meeting in Davos, Switzerland over the past three years. China and India
have also hosted WEF meetings since 2000, and the India edition is a highly
popular annual event.
JLL India's top
leadership attended the India Economic Summit 2016 on 6-7 October 2016 in New
Delhi, and got an inside view of a number of key discussions. Of high interest
were the sessions on India's Fourth Industrial Revolution and
its dividends, and key debates on how PM Modi's policy reformshave
helped revitalized the world's fastest growing large economy.
Anuj Puri, a veteran
Indian real estate thought leader and industry influencer, is also a keen
observer and analyst of macro and micro- economic dynamics and trends that
impact global and India-specific. His comments on Day 1 of the Summit:
“I attended the World
Economic Forum’s India Economic Summit with my eyes trained on discussions by
high-level leaders from business, government, civil society and academia that
explore how we can collectively shape policies for inclusive growth and harness
the Fourth Industrial Revolution. I was richly rewarded on this front.
The world economy
today is a matrix of divergent growth patterns, where different economies are
growing at different paces. The ‘two-speed’ economic growth theory that was
followed for at least two decades before the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) of
2008-09 has, over the last five years, given way to divergent growth paths in
both the advanced and emerging economies. It has become difficult to cull
optimum investment opportunities globally, and BREXIT fears as well as the
slowdown in China have further dimmed the global investment outlook.
In the words of
previous RBI governor Raghuram Rajan, India remained an 'island of
calm in a turbulent ocean'. It is for good reason that this South-Asian major
not only ranks favourably among all other BRICS’ economies but also
with reputed credit rating agencies like S&P, Fitch and Moody’s.
China, the much-touted
'growth engine of the world', has been seeing a significant and consistent
slowdown in activity. From a peak growth rate of around 14% y-o-y in 2007, it
went to an average growth rate of around 9% during and immediately post-GFC.
Currently, it is below 7%, and the Chinese economy has become a cause for real
concern. In fact, global policymakers, economic analysts and investors waiting
to see when and to what extent China will bottom out.
China's exports, which
accounted for 40% of its pre-crisis GDP, have been under considerable stress as
world demand slows down. Mineral ore imports by China have also fallen to
adversely impact economies of several developed and developing nations. The
export component of its GDP is currently down to one-fourth, comparable to that
of India. For consumption-driven economies such as India, falling commodity
prices are favourable because their imports get cheaper and trade
deficits narrow down.
India’s states are
comparable to some major economies across the globe. However, the opportunity
is way bigger for India as a country and an emerging superpower. Finance
minister Arun Jaitley aptly states at the World Economic
Forum in Davos earlier this year that India’s GDP can potentially grow to 9%,
and that the ‘I’ in BRICS now represents hope for the world.
The time is right for
India to strengthen its economy and cities further, so that it can gear up for
the oncoming Fourth Industrial Revolution. In manufacturing, we
need to be innovation-driven as well as mass-product supply-driven under the
government's ‘Make in India’ program. The demographic dividend
must be capitalized on through other initiatives like ‘Skill India’ and ‘Digital
India’, and we must meet the Digital Age heads-on with appropriate skills
and talent development.
Likewise, the country
can lose no further time in improving its ‘ease of doing business’ quotient.
The start-up ecosystem can deliver a rich harvest in India, and we must work
towards attracting more businesses from the mature economies to serve our
billion-plus consumers and provide gainful employment to our aspirational
youth. Initiatives like the Smart Cities program will help
usher in the next phase ofurbanisation, but such initiatives need to be
sustained for years to come so that the changes start happening organically at
the grassroots level.”
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