Hi Guys! It's afternoon and unfortunately for you, I am free again today. So let me bore you with a long winded post again. This time let's take a look at the high import duties on bikes and why i think they are important.
I agree that globalisation is the order of the day. It is seen as the phenomenon which will rid us consumers of the inefficiencient producers/ service providers while it will also open new vistas for our competetive firms to explore overseas markets and hence grow bigger.
I also agree that we, the consumers, should be given the right to buy a bike we want to at a price that is not inflated just because the bike is manufactured in another country. I mean, why should we have to pay for the fact that our companies, after continued protection from the government for over 50 years, haven't been able develop cabalities good enough to complete with the big companies of the world?
But I do not believe that the people who are responsible for making these decisions are fools. Infact, if we make the mistake of dismissing them as idiots or lazy, because they are the ones responsible for all the obstructions we face in buying our dream bikes, then I believe that we are taking a very myopic view of a subject that is perhaps the most important one facing the country today. Moreover, we must also remember that the so called babus are the very same people who have been selected after a qualifying procedure that is widely accepted as the toughest in this world. India has a whole ministry dedicated to foreign trade and commerce. It has established instutes that research this aspect all the year round and help device India's strategy for the negotiations that take place from time to time. Surely they are not all fools and there must be an angle to this whole situation that we are missing. So let's look at this issue from a perspective that is a bit larger than being merely related to bikes.
At Trade negotiations, India and other developing countries are repeatedly pressurised by EU and US to reduce our duties and make our markets open to their exporters. They say that this would ultimately help us since it would mean that we would get better quality products and would also force our manufacturers to improve out of compulsion.
Now, of course India has way higher duties than say US or EU, but we must remember that duties are not the only side to the coin that is foreign trade. The other side is the oft forgotten issue of subsidy. Unfortunately, India is not as rich as the US yet and while it does have higher duties, it cannot bring them down because it cannont match the amount of subsidies that US gives to it's own manufacturers.
Now the prime bone of contention to this whole subsidy issue is agricultural subsidies in the US. According to USDA (United states department of agriculture) USDA subsidies for farms in United States totaled $177589000000 for the 1995-2006(boy it takes you a while to figure out how much that is in words!). Now I hope you realise that India is primarily still an agricuture based economy( much as we would want it to turn into a biking based economy, those days are still quite some distance away). Should India reduce it's duties to the levels demanded by the developed countries, the market would be flooded with US agri products that, due to the huge subsidies, would be priced at half(or even less) than what Indian produce would be priced at. The Indian governement would not have the coffers deep enough to match these subsidies and hence Indian products will continue to suffer a price disadvantage. When this happens, us consumers with our now affordable superbikes will obviously buy the cheaper and higher quality US import flour, bread, fruits, etc. This will send a wave of starvation across the farmers and on the people whose livelihood depend on agricuture. Such people are very very much higher in number as compared to people who are pro-globalisation and pro-sportbikes,cars,etc. Due to our country's one-man-one-vote system, this also means they have more votes than us. They are also more prone to start a large scale bloody revolution(a la Russia in the early last century) across the country in case they feel that their children just might die of starvation because people in the cities wanted cheaper designer clothes, exotic vegetables and vehicles that could go 0-100 in about the same time it takes for them to shout "murdabad".
So, you see our clever little babus have developed a strategy to stonewall all these cries of duty reduction. They say to the developed world, "yes, we agree that globalisation is a necessity, so why don't you start by removing subsidies in you own countries and allowing mod4 to our IT companies(those in IT would understand this) and then we will reciprocate in a similar manner." I mean, if US is so pro-globalisation and free market, then why does it raise such a hue and cry against outsourcing? The only reason it lets Japanese and Chinese companies operate freely in US is because these are huge markets for US companies too and they know that if they create trade burdens for these companies, the governments of the countries that these comapanies belong to would respond in a similar manner.
Let's take two hypothetical countries, Jap and Ind. Now suppose Ind has a lot of fertile lands and can grow a lot of agricultural commodities but is technically backward while Jap has no or very little fertile lands but it does have great engineers who make great bikes. As a result, when isolated, the prices of bikes in Ind will be high while food will be in short supply in Jap while it will still have great bikes. Now as per globalisation, if these countries were to engage in trade and remove all duties, the people in Ind wil get access to those great bikes while the people in Jap will get to eat. However, i hope you see that how the scenario is not quite so simple in real life when things such as subsidies come into play.
By the way, US and other developed nations also have another weapon in their hands in order to stop third world countries' products from entering their market. It's what is known as "safety standards". Safety standards are made so stringent that adhering to them makes the cost price for the seller go high and hence the product becomes incompetetive.
So, I hope you see how this works, we stop their banks, automobile companies, designers and retailers from accessing our markets so as to use it as a bargaining chip in order to force the developed countries to provide a level playing field to our agri products and IT cos.
Well that ends my lecture. Since this frum is titled "Hard Torque" which, I take it, is word play for Hard Talk, in my opinion this is a suitable place for a bit of dispassionate talk where we put aside our own beliefs, convictions and passions and look at topics of importance from a perspective that does not just serve our own selfish purposes, but also seeks to address bigger issues that are associated and entangled with such topics( as things usually are in real life). We owe our country and it's people at least that much( no matter how bad the roads...he he)
On that note,I hope the developed countries remove their subsidies soon and that India removes it's duties to reciiprocate and then I am really sure that you guys will see yours truly on an affordable superbike riding with a clear conscience, a smile and a twinlke in the eye...



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