Frugal Businesses in India: Valuable Lessons in Minting Money

Frugal Businesses in India: Valuable Lessons in Minting Money



Lessons from frugal businesses minting money in India

For foreign investors, India is⁢ a puzzle. On the plus side, it is a potentially huge market, recently passing China as the​ world’s most populous. The IMF predicts that India will⁢ be the⁢ fastest-growing of the world’s 20‌ biggest economies this year. By⁣ 2028 its GDP is ‍expected to be the third-largest, moving ⁣past Japan‌ and Germany. The stockmarket is pricing in heady growth. Over the past five years Indian ⁢stocks have beaten those elsewhere in the world, including America’s.

The minuses can seem equally formidable. Just 8% of‌ Indian households own a car.​ Last year the number of individual ⁢investors in Indian public markets was a paltry 35m. The smartphone revolution unleashed 850m netizens, but ​most scroll free apps​ like WhatsApp (500m users) and YouTube‌ (460m). Blume,⁢ a venture-capital ⁢(VC) firm, estimates that only 45m Indians are responsible for⁣ over half of all online spending. Netflix, the video-streaming giant, which ⁤entered India in 2016 and charges Indians ​less than almost anyone else, has ⁣attracted just 6m subscribers.

The ⁢tension between tomorrow’s promise and today’s reality ‌is reflected in ‌India’s tech scene. ⁢Over the ‌past decade giddy projections of spending by hundreds of millions of consumers led investors to pour money into young tech firms. According to ‌Bain, a consultancy, between 2013 and 2021 ⁣total‌ annual VC funding ballooned from $3bn to $38.5bn. Now the easy‍ money is running out. In 2022 startups received $25.7bn. In the first half of this year they got a measly $5.5bn.

2023-10-26 07:35:33
Post from www.economist.com
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