B & G - Abhishek
B & G - Abhishek
B & G - Abhishek
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A. As a common citizen of India, you had been instructed to find out the major issues
which are posing as challenges to the Business community and what are the enabling
factors, facilitation, policy matters that you want from the government and reforms,
you expect from the government, so the business growth runs at a faster pace.
Ans: -
Challenges: -
Starting a Business
The cost of starting a business in India is astronomical, and the procedures involved can be
daunting without local knowledge. There are 12 procedures to complete in the initial set up
of a business costing 49.8% of income per capita. It takes almost a month (27 days) to
complete the tasks on average, which is well above the OECD average of 12 days.
Dealing with Construction Permits
Construction permits are also a costly pursuit, involving 34 procedures and taking 196 days.
Obtaining Intimation of Disapproval from the Building Proposal Office and paying fees takes
around a month, and NOCs must be sought from the Tree Authority, the Storm Water and
Drain Department, the Sewerage Department, the Electric Department, the Environmental
Department, the Traffic & Coordination Department, and the CFO.
Getting Electricity
The cost of getting electricity is relatively cheap in comparison to the rest of South Asia, but
the number of procedures involved can be rather daunting. What’s more, each procedure is
in itself quite time constraining, taking around eight days to receive an external site
inspection and three weeks to get externally connected, have a meter installed and conduct
a test installation.
Exports and imports challenges
Despite government legislation to improve international trade, there are still various hurdles
to importing and exporting goods. Exporters and investors face non-transparent and often
unpredictable regulatory and tariff regimes. Several layers of bureaucracy make it
challenging to move goods efficiently, and companies must file a long list of documents
before moving products across borders.
Protecting Investors and enforcing contracts
The concept of investor protection is one that has garnered a lot of attention of late, and
new bodies such as the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) have been set up to
that effect. Enforcing contracts will also be an area that must be looked at; India ranks as
one of the worst countries in the world for the ability to enforce a contract, taking an
average of 1,420 days.
Reforms: -
The factors for a favourable environment for business and investment are: -
land acquisition
protection of IP and personal data
access to credit and equity capital
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availability of electricity and labour
timely resolution of bankruptcy and insolvency issues
B. What are the Treaties, Trade Agreements, Trading Blocs that are causing problems as
far as the international flow of business is concerned. Similarly, what are the good
points that you find out of the above that are positively impacting upon the
international business community. Indicate the roles played by the various countries
to curb the business growth of China including Russia and some other countries.
Ans: -
International Treaties, Trade Agreements, Trading Blocs: -
Regional trade agreements include the North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA), Central American-Dominican Republic Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR),
the European Union (EU) and Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC).
Free Trade Agreement between Hong Kong, China and Georgia, parties to the
Agreement, which entered into force on 13 February 2019.
India has signed the following 6 limited coverage Preferential Trade Agreements (PTAs):
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Asia Pacific Trade Agreement (APTA)
Global System of Trade Preferences (GSTP)
SAARC Preferential Trading Agreement (SAPTA)
India-Afghanistan PTA
India-MERCOSUR PTA
India-Chile PTA
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China, while China increased tariffs (ranging from 5% to 25%) on $110 billion worth
of imports from the United States. Such measures have sharply decreased bilateral
trade in 2019. On May 10, 2019, President Trump announced he was considering
raising tariffs on nearly all remaining products from China. A protracted and
escalating trade conflict between the United States and China could have negative
consequences for the Chinese economy. China’s growing global economic influence
and the economic and trade policies it maintains have significant implications for the
United States and hence are of major interest to Congress. While China is a large and
growing market for U.S. firms, its incomplete transition to a free-market economy
has resulted in economic policies deemed harmful to U.S. economic interests, such
as industrial policies and theft of U.S. intellectual property.
Australia, the first country to ban the 5G technology of Huawei and fellow Chinese
firm ZTE, China faces growing scrutiny after Canberra uncovered worrisome Chinese
meddling in its domestic politics.
The EU has labelled China a “systemic rival” and “economic competitor,” reflecting
hardening attitudes toward Beijing across Europe. Chinese practices of limited
market access for foreign firms, industrial policies that explicitly displace
international competitors, and preferential treatment for state-owned enterprises
have pushed European countries like Germany and France to proactively prioritize
their own development. In January 2020, the EU unveiled a recommended strategy
for its member states aimed at preventing Beijing from dominating 5G markets and
exploiting security vulnerabilities. Due to security concerns, the Czech Republic,
Estonia, Latvia, Poland, and Romania have all signed agreements with the United
States on 5G security that would limit the role of Huawei in their markets. Even the
UK, which decided in January to allow Huawei a partial role in building out its 5G
infrastructure, recently reversed course and is likely to pass legislation requiring
Huawei to have no role in the country’s 5G networks by 2023. Instead, Britain has
proposed forming a so-called “D10 club of democratic partners,” which would
include the G7 countries—Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK, and the
United States—plus Australia, India, and South Korea. The collective goal would be
“to create alternative suppliers of 5G equipment and other technologies to avoid
relying on China.”
Germany is another important case, as its high-tech manufacturing economy has
made it China’s top investment destination in Europe. Chinese involvement in
German industrial giants, including Daimler, which is developing new battery
technologies, and Kuka, the country’s largest robotics producer, has raised alarms
and led Berlin to call for a European Union–wide investment review body. France,
too, has increased restrictions on foreign investment to stop what it calls “looting” of
sensitive technologies. However, many smaller European countries, such as Greece
and Portugal, worry that restricting outside capital could hamper their economic
growth.
Russia: -
As attacks continue in Ukraine and Russian forces press their advance on the capital
Kyiv, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has pleaded for help from the international
community. The European Union, the United Kingdom, the United States, Australia,
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and France unveiled a series of sanctions against Russia targeting banks, oil
refineries, and military exports.
United States
The US took aim at Russia’s oil refining sector with new export curbs. The sanctions
announced by the White House ban the export of specific refining technologies,
making it harder for Russia to modernise its oil refineries. Washington and its allies
also barred some of Russia’s banks from the SWIFT international payments system, a
list officials said was still being finalised with EU partners. The White House released
a statement saying measures will also include “wide restrictions on semiconductors,
telecommunication, encryption security, lasers, sensors, navigation, avionics and
maritime technologies”. It also targeted military end-users, including the Russian
defence ministry.
France
The French finance minister Bruno Le Maire said Monday that the country will go
after luxury goods owned by Russians targeted by sanctions, following a defence
council meeting called by French President Emmanuel Macron.
The European Union
The 27-country EU on Wednesday also imposed several packages of sanctions on
Russia, including a ban on the export of specific refining technologies to Russia from
Europe. The group said it was planning close its airspace to Russian aircraft, including
the private jets of Russian oligarchs. The bloc also banned Russian state-owned
television network Russia Today and news agency Sputnik. For Russian ally Belarus,
the EU imposed a ban on imports of products from mineral fuels to tobacco, wood
and timber, cement, iron, and steel. The EU also decided to freeze any European
assets of Russian President Vladimir Putin and his foreign minister Sergey Lavrov.
Australia
Australia imposed more sanctions on Russia targeting several of its elite citizens and
lawmakers, and said it was “unacceptable” that China was easing trade restrictions
with Moscow at a time when it invaded Ukraine. Australia is also working with the
United States to align sanctions on key Belarusian individuals and entities who
helped Russia.
United Kingdom
The UK said it will lock Russia’s Sberbank out of the sterling clearing and slap
sanctions on three other banks. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss also said there will be a
full asset freeze on Russian lenders within days. Prime Minister Boris Johnson
unveiled the UK’s largest-ever package of sanctions against Russia targeting banks,
members of Putin’s closest circle, and wealthy Russians who enjoy high-rolling
London lifestyles. In the 10-point sanctions package, the British government said it
would impose an asset freeze on major Russian banks, including state-owned VTB,
its second-biggest bank, and stop major Russian companies from raising finance in
the UK. Britain will also ban Russia’s flagship airline Aeroflot from landing in the UK,
suspend dual export licences to Russia, and ban exports of some high-tech exports
and parts of the extractive industry.