Why India could feel the global financial aftershocks this time
India's huge domestic demand helped it weather the financial crisis of 2008. But since then, Indian companies have invested internationally, increasing India's vulnerability to economic downturns.
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Uncertain times
But such inflows have since fallen off as investors grow leery of India’s inflation and corruption challenges as well as global uncertainty.
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To head off mounting concerns, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee told reporters Monday that India was well-positioned to weather the global economic headwinds.
“These developments could have some impact on India. But as India’s growth story is intact and its fundamentals strong, we are in a better position than many other nations to manage the challenge,” said Mr. Mukherjee.
One silver lining for India: Commodity prices like oil are trending downward, which will help India gain control of rising inflation.
Paulson-Ellis says if the government gets serious about expanding economic reforms, India will be in a strong position. “In the near-term there are reasons to be cautious, but if inflation comes under control, if the government starts to reform more seriously, India does not have the structural problems that you can see in the Eurozone,” he says.
Today's decline
Stock analysts say today’s decline was mostly due to uncertainty caused by the first-ever downgrade of the US credit rating. The Sensex shed more than 546 points at one point before it started to rebound. The index still lost 315 points, or 1.82 percent, on the day.
The main indices in Hong Kong and Japan dropped more than 2 percent, and the Shanghai Composite Index slid almost 4 percent.
The Sensex peaked last November around the Laxmi Pujan, a ceremony where traders open a new year’s set of account books and make offerings to the goddess of wealth. Stock brokers gathered in an exchange conference room decked out with Greco-roman pillars, marigold garlands, and a Bollywood movie poster for a comedy called “No Problem.”
Traders were giddy: The market had closed a smidgen away from an all-time high, and the next day the US president was coming to their city with the titans of American industry.
“The whole world is putting so much money in this growing country,” a retired colonel turned stock broker named R. Handa told this reporter. “The country has earned a name in the world.”
Today, Colonel Handa’s faith in India’s strength remains unshaken. He puts the blame for the 20 percent skid on the woes of the outside world.
“It’s the effect of the neighbors, the global market having done so badly,” says Handa, who is chairman of SIC Stocks & Services in Bangalore.



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