Tuesday, November 07, 2006: After the noted
'reverse brain drain' of talented Indians who have returned home
from Silicon Valley to fuel the country's tech boom, the money has
now begun to follow the people, more quietly, the American magazine
Newsweek said.
Newsweek International reports the story of India and
Indian
Diaspora, likening it to "a Bollywood script about two
brothers, the younger one rich and successful, the older one poor
but closer to the family. And now, not too late in life, they are
reconciling."
As recently as a decade ago, overseas Indians were viewed either
as cash cows to be milked or as traitors who'd taken their highly
subsidised education and abandoned the motherland to get rich abroad,
it said in its forthcoming Nov 13 issue.
As India has evolved from agrarian torpor to high-tech vibrancy
in recent years, the newly self-confident country has also begun
to re-evaluate its relationship with its expatriates, it said.
At the same time, members of the Diaspora have begun looking homeward
for the same reason they originally left - the pull of economic
opportunity.
"The mindset of India changed in the 1990s," it said,
citing author Gurcharan Das, whose book
India Unbound charts
the country's rise. "The minds of young Indians, especially,
became decolonised."
Though overseas Chinese, not to mention overseas Filipinos and Mexicans,
are much more famous for sending cash home, Indians now lead the
world in this category. According to the World Bank, cash remittances
from Indians abroad have more than doubled since 1995, and totalled
$22 billion last year.
China, at $21 billion, was close behind, it said, noting that over
the past decade India's aggregate remittances totalled $154 billion
- about 50 percent higher than what China received from its much
larger diaspora.
With more than 20 million Indians overseas, including 200,000 millionaires
in America alone, the diaspora could be a critical weapon for India
in its effort to catch up to its archrival, Newsweek said.
A recent JPMorgan report says the diaspora is becoming "a powerful
catalyst in helping India realise - perhaps even exceed - its aspiration
toward 10 percent annual GDP growth."
Aside from remittances, the stock of bank deposits held by non-resident
Indians, many of whom bank money in India to take advantage of preferential
interest rates, topped $32 billion last year, accounting for a whopping
23 percent of India's foreign exchange reserves.
These large inflows have helped protect the value of the rupee and
dampen inflation in a nation that, unlike China, runs a trade and
government deficit.
And while it's not clear how much of the foreign money flowing into
the Bombay Stock Exchange comes from overseas Indians, local traders
assume the NRIs account for a good share of the incoming money that
has driven up the market 300 percent since 2003, Newsweek said.
Over the same period, the Shanghai market has stagnated due in large
part to China's reluctance to open it to hot money from any overseas
source.
Newsweek noted other critical differences between the Chinese and
Indian diasporas. Because overseas Chinese are concentrated nearby
in places like
Hongkong,
Singapore and
Taiwan and largely
earned their wealth in manufacturing, they're both better situated
and more motivated to make direct investments in factories on the
mainland.
In contrast, India's post-independence emigrants were mainly professionals
- doctors, lawyers, scientists and engineers - or small shop and
hotel owners, settled in countries far from India. Until recently
they had neither the expertise nor the impetus to invest in their
homeland.
That's a big reason, it says citing JPMorgan analyst Rajeev Malik,
that to date overseas Chinese have sunk far more than their Indian
counterparts have into new factories back home.
The overseas Chinese contributed as much as half of China's
foreign
direct investment in the 1990s, while overseas Indians chipped
in only about 10 per cent of India's much smaller total. In 2000,
for example, overseas Chinese pumped $32 billion in FDI into China,
compared with $200 million for Indians. But this, too, is changing,
Newsweek said. SOURCE-http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/msid-350942,curpg-1.cms