India is rarely as shiny as its fans insist. The $1bn fraud perpetrated by Satyam Computer Services will not only throw the $40bn software and outsourcing industry into a tailspin, it will also raise disturbing questions about the risks of doing business in India - and even the sustainability of the country's much-vaunted growth miracle.
Only a few months ago, India saw itself as relatively immune from the global credit crisis. Some officials patted themselves on the back for going slow on liberalising capital markets, crediting their prudence as yet further evidence of the country's inexorable rise. But India now has a credit crunch of its own. Exporters are hurting and threatening to lay off 10m workers. Terror attacks on Mumbai have cast into doubt the competence of the security apparatus and shaken business and consumer confidence.
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In spite of its poverty, it has sold itself as a country to which Fortune 500 companies can entrust sensitive data, banks their back offices and even patients the production of medicines. Its extraordinary success in IT over the past decade was based on the trust and credibility it established with globalised companies; the Satyam scandal has now put that at risk.
Outsourcing companies, furthermore, are keen to move up the value chain; to outsource some of their own functions and even to start acquiring the western companies whose businesses they help run. These ambitions are laudable. But like India itself, whose economic success story is built on extremely rickety social and infrastructural foundations, such grand designs can also smack of hubris.
Showing posts with label Accounting Scandals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Accounting Scandals. Show all posts
Sunday, January 11, 2009
The FT Editors Echo Jim Rogers on India
Jim Rogers has mentioned his doubts about India as a destination for investment on various occasions (for example, in this unfortunately undated article on his website). Friday's Financial Times included a bearish editorial on India, prompted by the accounting scandal at outsourcer Satyam Computer Services ("Satyam Scandalises"). Below are a couple of excerpts from the editorial.
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