FDI
in multi brand retail: Boon or Bane?
What is FDI?
Before we can debate on the pros and cons of FDI in multi-brand
retail sector, it is important to understand a few key things about FDI and
Retail in India.
Foreign Direct Investment refers to capital inflows from abroad,
investment of which enhances the production capacity of the economy.
However,
FDI in retail is slightly different from the investment in corporate, manufacturing,
or infrastructural sectors. Retail can be single or multi-brand and may be
described as a sale to the ultimate consumer at a margin of profit.
Single-brand
retailing refers to businesses selling their goods to individual customers
under a single brand umbrella. Multi-brand retailing, on the other hand, is
selling of goods to individual customers by businesses under several brand
names.
FDI
in single brand retailing in India has been allowed since 2006, but FDI in
multi brand retailing has been permitted recently. This means that a retail
store with a Foreign Direct Investment can sell multiple brands under one roof.
Hence, it serves as the link between the producer or manufacturer and the
individual consumer. As a signatory to the World Trade Organization’s General
Agreement on Trade & Services which included wholesale and retail services,
India had to open up its retail trade sector to foreign investment.
How will FDI benefit the
nation?
The
retail sector of India is highly fragmented, characterized by 97% of its
business being run by the unorganized retailers while the organized retail sector
is still in its infantile stages.
It
is expected that with the infusion of Foreign Direct Investment, the retail
sector will become more organized.
FDI in agricultural
sector
Investment
in food-based retailing especially will ensure adequate flow of capital into
the country and promote its productive uses.
Additionally,
this investment will promote the welfare of farmers by contributing to
agricultural growth and thereby, increase their income levels.
Intermediaries,
known by different names in different parts of the country, flout the most
basic of business ethics. Prices lack transparency, farmers are not paid their
due share, and even regulated markets have come to take on a monopolistic
character.
Farmers
in countries with a greater share of organized retail are easily able to
realize 2/3rd of the price paid by the final consumers. However, in
India the situation is such that farmers consider themselves lucky if they
manage to earn even 1/3rd of the price in the final market. We can
expect FDI to assist in reducing the dominance of intermediaries on the value
chain of the agricultural sector.
How does FDI serve the
consumers?
FDI
in retail will ultimately make the consumers happy. In the absence of
intermediaries, the consumers will have to pay, for the same product, a lesser
price than before.
Also,
in the unorganized sector the consumer has to argue or fight for their consumer
rights and most of the times, they have to accept defeat. For example, it is
very difficult for them to return or exchange a faulty product. This process
will become more standardized, though, with the advent of FDI.
FDI
will also serve as an antidote to inflation. The producer will be able to get
direct payment from the retailer and the same will be higher than what they are
used to getting, due to the absence of intermediaries.
In
accordance to the provisions made, any company which opts to go for 51%
partnership in retail shall have to tie up with a local partner. This will
usher in an era of low-priced quality products. It will also improve the income
levels for all concerned as a direct consequence of the partnership, investment
and increased sales.
FDI
will give rise to a wave of investment in the logistics of the retail chain
leading to efficient market mechanisms.
FDI and Horticulture
In
spite of being the biggest producer of fruits and vegetables (more than 180
million MT), India doesn’t have a strong integrated cold-chain infrastructure
with a meagre 5400 cold storages which add up to a total capacity of about 24
million MT.
The
irony is that about 80% of the capacity is used only for preservation of
potatoes. The perishable horticultural commodities find it difficult to reach
distant markets, including the overseas market. FDI will become a catalyst in
avoiding any distress sales of these products, erosion of quality and wastage
of the produce.
FDI
in retail sector will give way to healthy competition. Some may consider it to
be a negative, but rising competition is a boon for the Indian market, paving
the way for superior quality products, innovation and high consumer
expectations.
Is FDI to be feared?
The
fears that entry of FDI in multi-brand retail may cause unemployment as a
consequence of firms importing materials from the global market instead of
buying it from domestic suppliers are
unfounded as it has been seen that the entry of big corporates like Reliance
and Tata have substantially improved the living standards of farmers and villages
supplying the raw materials.
The
present Public Distribution System (PDS) will also be strengthened owing to
better products and storage facility.
In
short, allowing FDI in multi-brand retail would bring about supply chain
management, increase investment in technology, lead to manpower and skill
development, upgradation in agriculture sector, and benefit the nation as a
whole through increased GDP and tax income. Greater production will lead to
greater employment and bring about a positive change and prosperity to the
retail industry, and by extension to all the stakeholders in this sector.
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