Thursday, August 13, 2015

India's economic reform agenda hits roadblocks

India's economic reform agenda hits roadblocks


[NEW DELHI] Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's ambitious reform agenda has stalled with crucial bills stuck in India's parliament, which ended its latest session this week in bitter uproar.
After sweeping to power 15 months ago in a landslide election victory, Mr Modi's right-wing government promised a string of business-friendly reforms to attract foreign investment and revive the economy.
But the opposition has blocked flagship tax and land reforms with rowdy protests in parliament, while a much-touted plan to overhaul archaic labour laws has yet to be unveiled.
A year after Mr Modi's first Independence Day speech, hailed as a political tour de force, analysts say he risks failing to deliver on his promises.



They will be closely watching his second on Saturday for signs that his right-wing government is still committed to pushing through reforms.
"PM Modi promised he would quickly change the economy and get GDP growth back on track," said Satish Misra, a senior fellow at the Observer Research Foundation think tank in New Delhi.
"People now have a lot of doubt about that. He promised more than he could deliver," he told AFP.
LANDMARK TAX REFORMS
The prime minister this week accused the main opposition Congress party of holding back the economy for its weeks-long protest in parliament to demand ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders resign over graft allegations.
The government is desperate to pass a bill paving the way for a landmark national sales tax to replace a myriad of complex state and national levies and boost the economy.
But it failed to secure enough backing and now faces a huge struggle to meet a deadline of next April, the start of the financial year.
Companies say simplifying India's unwieldy tax system would make it easier to do business in a country clogged with red tape, boosting production and growth.
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley accused Congress of ignoring the national interest over the goods and services tax, before parliamentary debate descended into personal insults.
Analyst Misra blamed Mr Modi and his senior ministers for failing to adequately negotiate with the opposition to resolve the impasse in parliament - where the BJP lacks a majority in the upper house.
"The (opposition) tactics we are seeing in the parliament are not new. We have seen them for the past 20 years," he said. "It's the government's responsibility to unblock these logjams but nothing is moving." The government has backtracked on another stuck bill meant to make it easier to buy land for infrastructure and other development projects, following mass protests led by Congress.
Companies complain that frustrating negotiations over purchase of land has held up billions of dollars worth of projects, sometimes for years.
Congress says the amendments, including scrapping a need for consent of 80 percent of landowners for some projects, would hurt millions of poor farmers.
Congress, humiliated at last year's general election, has been re-energised by the issue ahead of a critical election in Bihar state later this year.
INVESTMENT POURING IN
Moody's and Fitch unit BMI Research have warned such problems in implementing big-ticket reforms were aggravating investor concerns.
Central bank governor Raghuram Rajan also called for clarity on the stalled bills, telling Bloomberg TV that legislative action "would send a strong message to the outside that India is still on the move".
Analysts urged Modi to use Saturday's speech, delivered from Delhi's historic Red Fort, to detail how and when he plans to deliver on a plethora of reforms announced since taking office.
"Give us a detailed report card on the overabundance of schemes that have been announced since May 2014," commentator Gurcharan Das wrote in the Times of India this week.
The government defends its performance, saying foreign direct investment rose to US$31 billion last financial year, with firms such as Taiwan's Foxconn, the maker of iPhones, this month pledging US$5 billion to build factories.
"We are working on a number of other reform measures and hopefully we will be able to push those along faster," junior finance minister Jayant Sinha told India Today TV.
The economy grew 7.5 per cent for the first three months of this year, outperforming China's. But experts warn reforms are needed to at least maintain that pace to create jobs for India's millions of young people.
Sonal Verma, chief economist at Nomura, said investors were reassured by some initiatives already introduced, including coal auctions to replace a corruption-hit system of allocating mining licences. And some states were going it alone on reforms instead of waiting for the national government to act, she said.
"But the reality is that India is the world's biggest democracy and expectations around reforms have to be realistic," she told AFP.
AFP

Safety fears over Chinese chemical blasts

Safety fears over Chinese chemical blasts


[TIANJIN] Residents living near the site of giant explosions in a Chinese port expressed fears for their safety on Friday, after reports there could be hundreds of tonnes of dangerous chemicals at the site.
Officials in Tianjin, where the enormous blasts killed 50 people and injured more than 700, told a news conference they did not yet know what materials were at the hazardous goods storage facility where the explosions happened, or the cause of the blast.
But the Beijing News reported earlier that according to manufacturers, at least 700 tonnes of sodium cyanide were at the site, along with other substances, and the poisonous chemical had been detected in sewage samples in the area.
The report was no longer available on the newspaper's website on Friday.



A team of 217 nuclear and biochemical materials specialists from the Chinese military began work at the site on Thursday, the official Xinhua news agency said.
Little activity was visible in the immediate area on Friday, where devastation reigned and smoke still billowed from three different spots, although roads leading to it had been cleared of debris.
Some police wore no protective clothing, while others had full-face gas masks. Officers turned away residents who wanted to see the blast site, barring them from taking photos and telling them: "There's nothing to see here." At a nearby office building, security guard Liu Zongguang, 50, wore a cheap surgical mask.
"I'm wearing this mask because I saw some police wearing them, but I also saw some without masks, I don't really know what to do.
"I'm really scared, but I don't even know what to be scared of, the government hasn't said anything, nothing about what we should do to keep our families safe from the chemicals." The People's Daily, the official mouthpiece of China's ruling Communist Party, said that the facility's construction "clearly violated" safety rules.
Under Chinese regulations, warehouses stocking dangerous materials must be at least 1km away from surrounding public buildings and main roads, it said, but there were two residential compounds and several main roads within that distance.
Two hospitals, a convention centre, several residential compounds and a football pitch were also nearby, it said.
Approval for the facility was granted in 2013 while sales at one of the two closest residential compounds started the same year, suggesting it had "clearly" been built earlier.
"The warehouse should not have passed the environment assessment under normal circumstances," the paper quoted an unnamed environmental expert as saying.
AF
P

China's yuan flat after suspected PBOC intervention

China's yuan flat after suspected PBOC intervention


[ HONG KONG] China's yuan held steady against the dollar on Friday after suspected intervention by the central bank to get the volatile market to settle into a range and to curb expectations that the currency will fall into a depreciation cycle.
The People's Bank of China set the yuan's midpoint rate at 6.3975 per dollar prior to market open, firmer than the previous fix at 6.401.
The spot market opened at 6.3990 per dollar and was changing hands at 6.3995 at midday, 5 pips away from the previous close and 0.03 per cent away from the midpoint.
The spot rate is currently allowed to trade within a range 2 per cent above or below the official fixing on any given day.


The yuan fell for three consecutive days and had repeatedly touched fresh four-year lows since Tuesday, when the People's Bank of China (PBOC) surprised the market by devaluing the yuan by nearly 2 per cent.
"Major state banks are suspected of buying yuan whenever it nears 6.4 per dollar. This level appears to be where the PBOC wants to keep the yuan stable for today, possibly in the near term," said a trader at a foreign bank in Shanghai.
PBOC Governor Yi Gang said on Thursday that the central bank had already withdrawn from regular intervention but would implement effective management of the exchange rate in case of extreme currency volatility.
Offshore yuan was trading at 6.4325 per dollar, 0.51 per cent away from the onshore spot rate.
Offshore one-year non-deliverable forwards contracts (NDFs), considered the best available proxy for forward-looking market expectations of the yuan's value, traded at 6.5425, or 2.22 per cent away from the midpoint.
One-year NDFs are settled against the midpoint, not the spot rate, and now that the trading band has been widened to 2 per cent in either direction, corporates are much more wary of using NDFs to hedge, given the basis risk inherent in them.
As a result, the market has lost liquidity in recent years and has frequently proven an unreliable measure of market sentiment.
REUTERS

China fixes yuan stronger vs dollar, reversing falls

China fixes yuan stronger vs dollar, reversing falls


[SHANGHAI] China's central bank on Friday raised the yuan currency against the US dollar by 0.05 per cent, the national foreign exchange market said, ending three days of falls after a surprise devaluation.
The daily reference rate was set at 6.3975 yuan to US$1.0, up from 6.4010 the previous day, the China Foreign Exchange Trade System said. The rate was also slightly stronger than Thursday's close of 6.3982 yuan.
The stronger fixing for the yuan came after the People's Bank of China (PBoC) reassured financial markets by pledging to seek a stable currency after a shock devaluation of nearly two percent on Tuesday.
The cut, and two subsequent reductions, sent global financial markets into a tailspin as it raised questions over the health of the world's second-largest economy and fears of a possible currency war.


Beijing said the move was the result of switching to a more market-oriented method of calculating the daily reference rate which sets the value of the yuan, also known as the renminbi (RMB).
Previously, authorities based the rate on a poll of market-makers, but will now also take into account the previous day's close, foreign exchange supply and demand and the rates of major currencies.
The currency is still only allowed to fluctuate up or down two per cent on either side of the reference rate.
AFP

China investigates cause of blasts at Tianjin port, firms assess damage

China investigates cause of blasts at Tianjin port, firms assess damage


[TIANJIN] Investigators searched for clues on Friday to identify what caused two huge explosions at a warehouse used to store toxic chemicals and gas at a busy port in northeast China, as foreign and local companies assessed the damage to their operations.
The blasts in the city of Tianjin on Wednesday night killed at least 50 people, including a dozen fire fighters, state media said. About 700 people were injured, 71 seriously.
The explosions at the port, the world's 10th largest, were so big they were seen by satellites in space and registered on earthquake sensors.
The warehouse was designed to store dangerous and toxic chemicals, according to an assessment by environmental inspectors published in 2014. It was storing mainly ammonium nitrate, potassium nitrate and calcium carbide at the time of the blasts, according to the police.


A team from the International Atomic Energy Agency's Beijing environmental emergency response centre, as well as 214 Chinese military nuclear and biochemical materials specialists, had gone to Tianjin, the official Xinhua news agency said.
Several thousand residents were moved to 10 nearby schools after apartment buildings and homes were damaged, mainly by shockwaves from the explosions, it said. Two fires were still burning late on Thursday.
Vast areas of the port were devastated, crumpled shipping containers were thrown around like match sticks, thousands of new cars were torched and port buildings reduced to burnt-out shells, Reuters witnesses said.
Foreign companies from across the globe were trying to determine the damage to their facilities in and around the port, a gateway to northeast China.
The Nikkei newspaper said windows were broken at Toyota Motor Corp's passenger vehicle assembly plant but no one was hurt. It said numerous other Japanese companies sustained minor damage to their operations.
French carmaker Renault said more than 1,000 of its cars were damaged but no staff were hurt. Around 4,000 cars belonging to Hyundai Motor Co were at the site but damage had not yet been assessed, a spokesman said.
Mining giant BHP Billiton said its port operations and shipments were disrupted but its iron ore discharging berth had not been damaged.
Oil tanker arrivals and departures were also disrupted.
John Deere & Co, the US farm and construction equipment maker, said several workers who were at home at the time were injured, some critically.
PACKAGING "SUB-STANDARD"
Xinhua identified the owner of the warehouse as Tianjin Dongjiang Port Ruihai International Logistics. The state-backed China Daily newspaper said its manager had been detained.
The Tianjin Maritime Safety Administration said the company violated packaging standards during a safety inspection two years ago.
Of 4,325 containers that were checked, five failed the inspection because packaging was sub-standard, according to a report posted on the administration's website in January 2014.
The company's website said it was a government-approved firm specialising in handling "dangerous goods". Phone numbers listed on its website were disconnected and an email to the company went unanswered.
President Xi Jinping said those responsible should be"severely handled".
Tianjin city officials had met recently with companies to discuss tightening safety standards on the handling of dangerous chemicals, authorities said.
Industrial accidents are not uncommon in China following three decades of breakneck economic growth. A blast at an auto parts factory in eastern China killed 75 people a year ago when a room filled with metal dust exploded.
Wednesday's blasts, which came roughly 30 seconds apart, sent shockwaves through apartment blocks kilometres away in the port city of 15 million people. Internet videos showed fireballs shooting into the sky.
Xinhua said several containers had caught fire beforehand.
The state-run Beijing News earlier cited Tianjin fire authorities as saying they had lost contact with 36 firefighters. By late afternoon, Xinhua reported 18 were missing, while 66 were among the hundreds of people being treated in nearby hospitals.
Anxious residents rushed to hospitals to seek news about injured loved ones. Dozens of police guarded the entrance of the TEDA hospital, a Reuters witness said.
The blasts shattered windows in buildings and cars and knocked down walls in a 2-km radius around the site.
REUTERS

Google gets third extension to answer EU case

Google gets third extension to answer EU case


[BRUSSELS] Brussels has given Google an extension until the end of August to answer an anti-trust case alleging that it abuses its search engine's market dominance, a company spokesman said Thursday.
The two-week extension is the third given to the California tech giant.
The US firm had initially had 10 weeks after the European Commission lodged the case in mid-April to respond but an extension was given until August 17 following a request from the company.
"The Commission has now extended (it) to August 31," a company spokesman said.



Google accounts for 90 per cent of the online search market in Europe.
The EU's case centres around complaints that Google's preferential use of its own shopping product in its search engine could be harmful to consumers and competitors.
The EU is concerned that Google's retail competitors like travel portal TripAdvisor or business review site Yelp could be squeezed out as a result of Google's dominance.
The company could face huge fines if found culpable, as much as 10 per cent of its US$66 billion in worldwide turnover last year.
AFP

Dollar edges up on solid US retail sales report

Dollar edges up on solid US retail sales report


[NEW YORK] The dollar advanced modestly on Thursday against the euro and other currencies after a solid US retail sales report sparked speculation that the Federal Reserve will soon lift benchmark interest rates.
US retail sales rose 0.6 per cent in July from June to US$446.5 billion, a slightly bigger increase than the 0.5 per cent gain projected by analysts.
The Commerce Department also raised its figures for June sales to unchanged from the prior estimate of a 0.3 per cent decline.
"Markets grew a bit more confident in the Fed raising rates this year after America's main economic engine, the consumer, stepped up spending," said Joe Manimbo, senior market analyst at Western Union Business Solutions.


"Market sentiment remained brittle amid still elevated concerns about China's slowing economy and depreciating currency, which should keep the dollar and its top peers on a volatile footing."
The dollar's gains Thursday made up for some of the losses Wednesday, when the US currency dropped on speculation that the Fed will delay hiking interest rates following China's devaluation of the yuan.
AFP

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