Foreign Policy Blogs

Paradoxical India

India is a study in stark contradictions.  And as two new reports nicely illustrate, perhaps nowhere is this truer than in the country’s effort to achieve great power status.

 

One of the foundations of India’s growing stature on the world stage is its dynamic, internationally-competitive private sector – an area where India shines in contrast to China’s reliance on state-owned enterprises.  Indian entrepreneurs and business leaders are admired worldwide, and the country’s rising “soft power” appeal rests in important measure on its reputation for corporate prowess.  Indeed, the Indian approach to frugal innovation (“jugaad”) has become the latest buzzword in Western business circles (– see, for example, The India Way, a new book published by Harvard Business School).  And the country’s technology titans – Infosys, Tata Consulting Services and Wipro – have quickly become global icons that are poised to challenge the world-wide dominance of such U.S. services providers as IBM, Accenture and EDS.

 

A new report by Ernst & Young shines additional light on this aspect of Indian power.  It finds that the country’s companies are developing new frontiers in Europe.  Indian investors are now the second-ranked providers – just behind the Americans – of foreign direct investment in Europe in the business services, software and financial sectors.  The report also predicts that China and India will emerge as the most attractive destinations for global FDI flows over the next three years.

 

But as a second just-released report highlights, India still has far to travel before it can truly claim to play in China’s economic league.  According to a survey (see media reports here and here) of some 1,400 expatriate business executives in Asia, conducted by the respected Hong Kong-based firm, Political and Economic Risk Consultancy, India holds the dubious distinction of possessing Asia’s most inefficient bureaucracy.  The Indian penchant for copious amounts of red tape, the report argues, is holding the country back from matching China’s world-beating growth rates, not to mention deterring additional foreign investment.

 

The survey’s findings mirror the results of several other studies: 

India’s ascent up the great-power ladder is one of the signal developments of the 21st century.  Yet as these new reports make plain, the country is making the climb with its hands restrained.

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