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2015-08-27 04:55:15
By Vikram Barhat
27 August 2015
Not so long ago India was sold as a mystical land of ash-smeared holy men,
snake charmers and other cultural exotica, all part of the nation s collective
imagery.
The scale of the challenge
India ranks 142, out of 189 countries, for ease of doing business according to
a World Bank 2015 ranking. China, India s next-door neighbour and closest
competitor, ranks 90,while Canada (16), US (7), UK (8) and Australia (10) were
considerably more business friendly.
Source: The World Bank
But today s India is a far cry from the stereotypes.
After the US and China, it s the world s third largest economy. India s
meteoric rise has been fuelled by a remarkable shift in its economic fortunes.
During a period when growth remained anaemic across much of the industrialised
world, India s gross domestic product grew a staggering 7.2% in 2014 under
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's reform-focused government.
Aside from recent stock market jitters, the World Bank pegs India s GDP growth
at 7.5% for 2015. Much of India s economy is driven by its so-called
demographic dividend : Nearly two-thirds of India s 1.2 billion population is
under the age of 35, creating one of the largest consumer markets in the world.
It s no surprise it s attracting businesses the world over, keen to access
these new customers.
India provides a good balance between a fast-growing economy and one that
happens to be relatively open and transparent, said Dhruv Ratra, San
Francisco-based CEO of Anglian Omega Network, an umbrella group headquartered
in Dubai, UAE, whose business ventures in India include everything from beauty
product businesses to commodities and manufacturing.
With China slowing and providing multiple barriers to entry, and Europe
stagnating, there are very few places in the world that provide the
opportunities that India does.
Behemoths like Amazon, Starbucks, Uber, Foxconn and even the US presidential
candidate Donald Trump have expanded their businesses to India, thereby
justifying our views and decisions when we started operations in the country,"
Ratra added.
There s no doubt there are many rich investment opportunities in India, but
they re scattered over an obstacle course of opaque rules and regulations.
Business people who have found their way through say it takes a lot more than
deep reserves of patience to navigate.
The greasing of palms
India has long struggled with endemic corruption and it s still a problem.
Overt or implied demands ranging from small kickbacks, called baksheesh, to
large corporate donations common ways to grease the wheels of business
fortunes in India can quickly frustrate foreigners. India still ranks 85
among 175 countries on Transparency International's Corruption Perception
Index.
Corruption or graft is a reality foreign entrepreneurs must accept, but not
give into, said Melbourne, Australia-based Stephen Manallack, director at East
West Academy Pty Ltd, a cross-border trade and investment advisory service that
specialises in doing business in India.
The issue of corruption has been the elephant in the room for too long and
most people are reluctant to discuss it, said Manallack, author of Riding the
Elephant - Doing Business in India.
Dutch national Paul Schuttenbelt, who runs Youth Football International, a
football training academy, and the Delhi Youth League, said people won t ask
for pay-offs, but that means that sometimes things just don t move forwards.
Clearly a lot of middle-men and grounds staff don t work if you don t pay them,
or give them something.
A mountain of paperwork
Foreigners who want to set up businesses in India must remember that paperwork
and processing times are still a little tedious even for Indians familiar with
the system, Ratra said.
It takes an average of 30 days just to get a business officially registered,
too slow for entrepreneurs used to speedy processing in Canada (five days) or
Australia (2.5 days).
British expatriate Vikas Vij experienced this first-hand setting up his event
management business, The Ideas Exchange, in Mumbai. The process for
registering a business, becoming service-tax registered, installing telecoms
and internet systems is not as simple as we take for granted in the UK, said
Vij, in India since 2008.
The flow of foreign direct investment in India has long been hindered by a
complex system of inscrutable regulations.
Canadian businessman Suneet Singh Tuli believes there is a lot more that could
be done and wants the Modi government to deliver faster on its pro-business
promises. The government should address anomalies of duties to boost
manufacturing activity, suggested Tuli, president and CEO of Data Wind, a
Canadian tech firm specialising in low-cost digital devices such as tablets and
smartphones, which has operations in India. Greater transparency, good
e-governance and stringent graft [corruption] laws could lead to quicker policy
decision in procurements.
A patchwork of tax laws
Few things have dented India s appeal for foreign business people more than its
arduous tax laws. Critics argue that in addition to being out of sync with the
global norm, they re draconian and, in some cases, amount to tax terrorism.
India s highly publicised battles with local subsidiaries of foreign businesses
Vodafone, Nokia, and more recently Nestle, for instance have drawn media
attention and global scrutiny.
Anomalies in duty structure in relation to import of finished products versus
components is a major drawback, Tuli said, explaining that a patchwork of tax
laws across states can soon overwhelm entrepreneurs used to a more uniform set
of regulations back home.
Building relationships
Cultural misunderstanding plays a role in almost every case of cross-border
business failure, according to Manallack, who places it at the top of his list
of challenges.
Many western business people are not curious about Indian culture, he said.
Because Indians are so polite and courteous, the westerner thinks that the
Indian has adapted to them, but then nothing happens and they wonder why.
As a society, India is very relationship focused. To complicate matters, it s
many countries within a country.
India is a collage of extremely diverse groups of people identified by their
history, language, religion, caste, and education, said Ratra. This is a
complicated issue for most outsiders to wrap their heads around.
While setting up his football academy in India, Schuttenbelt experienced
cultural hurdles that frequently foiled what seemed like the perfect setup for
scoring a deal. I would reach agreements with the top people of the company,
after several meetings, and would walk away thinking I had the deal, he said.
Eventually, they d result in nothing.
Be prepared for transport problems
There has been a surge in bids to improve the country s creaky infrastructure.
Most of the recent infrastructural overhaul has been limited to a handful of
big cities Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Kolkata, Bengaluru and Hyderabad.
Compared to rival China, there s plenty of room for infrastructure growth in
India, said Tuli who operates businesses in both countries.
India has only 1,300 km of fast roads compared to 77,000 km in the US, and
112,000 km in China. India doesn t have any high-speed trains, most averaging
under 100km/hour, whereas China has the world s largest high-speed rail
network. Water shortage and power outages are common occurrences and many of
the country s ports still rely on manual labour to move cargo.
Hiring smart
There is a huge gap in the market for skilled professionals. While India has
around 487 million workers, more than two-thirds of Indian employers are
struggling to find employable workers.
From my own experience, the fundamental challenge we all face, contrary to
popular international opinion, is the difficulty in sourcing the right talent
and skill sets to run and scale up a business, said Vij. Each year more jobs
still go unfilled because the quality of talent does not match.
The current shortage of employable workers in India is attributed to the fact
that only 2.3% of the workforce in India has received formal skills training as
compared to 68% in the UK, 75% in Germany, and 52% in the US.
Sticking it out
For most of the first five years of doing business in India, Vij often thought
of giving in and going back to the UK, but decided to stick it out for the
opportunity and better work-life balance. The decision paid off: Our trade
exhibition, Professional Beauty, became the market leader in the region despite
many hurdles and battles, he said. This reinforced my thoughts on the value
of perseverance in adversity to the extent that we now run that event in four
cities around India, and next year will take it to Sri Lanka.
The key to business survival in India, Vij added, has been a strong streak of
stubbornness, an unwillingness to be beaten by anyone or any system. India has
given me the experience to be successful anywhere in the world, he said.