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Indians
top Global Consumer Confidence Survey
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Indians
are the world's most optimistic consumers,
followed by Norwegians and Danes, while
Japanese remain cautious despite their
recovering economy, a survey by market
researcher ACNielsen shows. India set
the highest level ever registered in the
ACNielsen Global Consumer Confidence Index
with a reading of 137, although Norway
was not far behind at 134 and Denmark
at 129. Indians, benefiting from a booming
economy, have topped the twice-yearly
survey since it was introduced in early
2005. In contrast, consumers in Asia's
other surging economy, China, scored a
much lower 105 although that was above
the global average reading of 99. The
index, published on Wednesday, measures
consumer confidence for the coming six
months and is based on a survey covering
46 markets around the world. The latest
survey, taken in late October and early
November, polled more than 25,000 Internet
users. The index average of 99 was up
one point from the previous survey in
the first half of 2006. Japanese consumers
were the third-most pessimistic in the
survey, after South Koreans and Portuguese.
Japan scored an index reading of 71, suggesting
consumers there have yet to be convinced
about the sustainability of the country's
economic recovery. Asia-Pacific countries
were notable among the survey's top scorers,
with Australia, New Zealand, Vietnam,
Indonesia, Malaysia, Hong Kong and Singapore
all marking index readings well above
the average of 99.
Courtesy:
www.hindustantimes.com, December 13, 2006
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India
to Overtake China's Growth, Credit Suisse
Says
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India
will overtake China next year as the world's
fastest-growing major economy on rising
consumer and government spending, Credit
Suisse's chief Asia economist Dong Tao
said. Credit Suisse raised its 2007 growth
forecast for India's $775 billion economy,
Asia's fourth biggest, to 10 percent from
8.5 percent, Tao said. China's $2.2 trillion
economy is expected to grow 9.9 percent
next year from 10.4 percent in 2006, he
said. Surpassing China's expansion rate
for the first time at least two decades
may help lure the overseas investment
India needs to replace dilapidated port
and roads and create manufacturing jobs.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh needs rapid
growth to lift 350 million people out
of poverty in the world's second-most
populous nation. ``India's growth story
will only get stronger,'' said D. H. Pai
Panandiker, president at RPG Foundation,
an economic policy group in New Delhi.
``There is a lot of money available to
spend in India.'' India's benchmark stock
index, which has risen 38 percent this
year, touched a record on Dec. 7 as overseas
funds bought a net $8.52 billion of stocks
after having invested a record $10.7 billion
in 2005. Per-capita income in India has
doubled in the last nine years and the
number of households earning an annual
income of at least $10,000 is rising more
than 20 percent a year, according to McKinsey
& Co. Commercial banks' outstanding loans
have doubled in the past three years and
has risen more than 30 percent since April
1.
Rising
Incomes
India had the highest average salary increase
in the Asia- pacific region in 2006 gaining
13.8 percent in 2006 compared with 14.1
percent gain in 2005, according to human-resources
consulting firm Hewitt Associates Inc.
Salaries in India may rise by 12.3 percent
to 15 percent in 2007. ``The private consumption
story in India is growing,'' Credit Suisse's
Tao said in a phone interview from Hong
Kong today. ``At this moment, India surpassing
China as the world's fastest growing major
economy is a possibility. India is more
resilient toward a global slowdown compared
to China.'' The Paris-based Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development
said last month growth among its 30 members
will cool to 2.5 percent in 2007 from
3.2 percent estimated for this year, the
weakest since 2003 and dragged down by
a U.S. slowdown. The 2007 forecast was
below the 2.9 percent anticipated in May.
Global
Trade
China, which accounts for 5 percent of
global trade, has become the fourth-largest
U.S. export market, from the 15th before
it joined the World Trade Organization
in 2001. It has run up record trade surpluses
with the U.S., including a $202 billion
trade gap last year that was the largest
imbalance between any two countries in
history. China's economy has grown at
an annual 10.1 percent pace on average
in the three years ended 2005, prompting
the central bank to take steps to prevent
the economy from overheating. The central
bank on Dec. 11 sold 120 billion yuan
($15.3 billion) of one-year bills, the
biggest sale this year, to drain cash
from the banking system and prevent growth
in credit and investment from rebounding.
The bank has also forced lenders to set
aside more money as reserves and raised
interest rates. India's economy, which
has expanded at an average 8.2 percent
in the past three years, is being driven
by local demand as the country's exports
make up only a 12th of gross domestic
product and 0.8 percent of global trade.
`Policy
Risks'
``The issue is not whether India grows
faster than China. The issue is whether
India's growth is sustainable,'' said
Rajeev Malik, senior economist at JPMorgan
Chase & Co. in Singapore. ``India has
been accelerating and policy risks are
greater in India. India is also an opportunity
because so much can be done on infrastructure.''
Prime Minister Singh today begins a four-day
visit to Japan to sell the India growth
story and seek help in funding his government's
five-year $320 billion plan to improve
the country's roads, ports and other infrastructure.
India now wants to draw investments from
Japan and narrow the gap in overseas funding
with China, which began unshackling its
economy in 1978, 13 years before India.
India's northern neighbor got $60 billion
of foreign direct investment in 2005 compared
with India's $7.5 billion. General Motors
Corp., Royal Dutch Shell Plc. and other
companies have invested in about 3,000
new factories and expansion projects worth
$21 billion in India since May 2004 to
cater to growing demand, according to
the finance ministry.
Government
Spending
``Capacity additions in the steel, auto,
metals and consumer goods sector seem
to be gathering pace in response to strong
consumer spending and a pick-up in public
investment spending in the power, roads
and highway sectors,'' Tao said. Industries
such as steel and cement are also benefiting
from Prime Minister Singh's decision to
increase spending on roads, ports and
other infrastructure by a quarter to 992
billion rupees ($22 billion) in the year
that started April 1 in a bid to attract
overseas manufacturing companies and spur
growth to 10 percent over a decade. ``We
do anticipate the government's infrastructure
spending to go through,'' Tao said.
Courtesy:
www.bloomberg.com, December 13, 2006
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Jignesh
Shah wins US-India Businessman Award
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Jignesh
Shah, CEO of Financial Technologies Group
and Multi Commodity Exchange, was honoured
with the US-India Businessman Award for
his "outstanding contribution as an entrepreneur
to integrate rural India with global markets".
Shah received the award from Congressman
Joseph Crowley, member of the house committee
on financial services. The event, organised
by US Indian Political Action Committee
(USINPAC) and US-India Business Alliance
(USIBA), was held in the presence of business
and political dignitaries. Shah was recognised
for his vision which is to help bridge
the economic divide by building globally
competitive and efficient financial market
infrastructure that will integrate India's
heartland in to global markets. He founded
Financial Technologies in 1995 as a software
company with a valuation of $10,000. A
decade later, the Mumbai-based company
has grown over $2 billion in market capitalisation
and is globally recognised as among the
top 10 leaders in financial technology
infrastructure and commodity exchanges.
The FTIL Group has launched fast growing
companies operating in the commodities
and exchange sectors. Sanjay Puri, CEO,
USIBA, said,"We are proud to have FTIL
as a member. Shah is a true visionary.
The remarkable successful of his companies
is an inspiration to business leaders
in both the US and India." Accepting the
award, Shah said,"I am honoured at being
globally recognised for the pioneering
efforts of FTIL in integrating India with
the global market. Speaking on behalf
of our organisation, I am delighted at
being a catalyst in promoting closer business
ties between our two countries. We are
confident that India can continue its
growth into one of the premier business
and financial markets." He said technology
and markets are the key change drivers
of the future and will be critical for
integrating rural pockets across the world
with the global economy. Financial Technologies,
he said, had embarked on a business mission
to create IPR-based solutions to enable
this global integration and he was honoured
that the efforts were being recognised.
Shah, who is 39 years old, has been recognised
as among the youngest first generation
Indian billionaires by Forbes Magazine,
and was recently honoured with the prestigious
Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year
Award 2006 for Business Transformation.
Courtesy:
www. timesofindia.indiatimes.com, December
13, 2006
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