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Showing posts with label hub. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hub. Show all posts

Sunday, 23 July 2023

A Level Economics 92: UK's Financial Sector

Changes in the Structure of the UK Economy:

In recent years, the UK economy has undergone significant changes in its structure. One notable trend is the growing size and influence of the financial sector. The financial sector includes banks, insurance companies, investment firms, and other financial institutions. Some key factors contributing to the growth of the financial sector in the UK include:

  1. Global Financial Hub: London, the UK's capital, has established itself as a global financial hub, attracting financial institutions and professionals from around the world. The presence of a well-developed financial infrastructure, including stock exchanges, financial services firms, and regulatory institutions, has further strengthened the UK's financial sector.

  2. Financial Services Exports: The UK's financial sector is a significant contributor to the country's export revenue. Financial services, such as banking, insurance, and asset management, are exported to other countries, generating substantial income for the UK economy.

  3. Technological Advancements: Technological advancements have facilitated the growth of financial services, such as online banking, digital payments, and fintech innovations, contributing to the expansion of the financial sector.

  4. Deregulation and Globalization: Deregulation and increased globalization have allowed financial institutions to operate more freely across borders, expanding their reach and influence.

Asset Bubbles and Economic Consequences: Asset bubbles occur when the prices of certain assets, such as real estate, stocks, or commodities, rise to unsustainable levels, driven by excessive speculation and investor optimism. When the bubble eventually bursts, asset prices collapse, leading to severe economic consequences. Examples of asset bubbles include the dot-com bubble in the late 1990s and the housing bubble that preceded the 2007-2008 financial crisis.

Causes of Asset Bubbles:

  1. Easy Credit: Loose monetary policies and low-interest rates can encourage borrowing and speculative investments, driving up asset prices.

  2. Speculative Behavior: Investors' expectations of ever-increasing prices can lead to speculative buying, further inflating asset values.

  3. Herd Mentality: As more investors rush to buy a particular asset, it can create a herd mentality, pushing prices higher.

Economic Consequences of Asset Bubbles:

  1. Wealth Erosion: When asset prices collapse, individuals and institutions holding these assets can experience significant wealth losses.

  2. Financial Instability: Bursting asset bubbles can lead to financial instability, impacting banks and financial institutions with exposure to the affected assets.

  3. Investment Downturn: Asset bubble bursts may discourage investment and lead to a slowdown in economic activity.

  4. Consumer and Business Confidence: Sharp declines in asset prices can erode consumer and business confidence, leading to reduced spending and investment.

The Role and Purpose of Regulation: Financial regulation is crucial for creating financial stability and protecting consumers and investors. Regulation aims to:

  1. Ensure Soundness: Regulators set standards to ensure that financial institutions maintain adequate capital, manage risks prudently, and comply with rules to avoid excessive leverage and instability.

  2. Prevent Systemic Risks: Regulation addresses systemic risks that could threaten the stability of the entire financial system.

  3. Consumer Protection: Regulation safeguards the interests of consumers and investors, ensuring fair treatment and transparency.

  4. Maintain Market Integrity: Regulations promote fair competition, prevent market manipulation, and ensure the integrity of financial markets.

Evaluation of the UK's Large Financial Sector: The UK's large financial sector has both benefits and challenges for the real economy:

Benefits:

  1. Contribution to GDP: The financial sector contributes significantly to the UK's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and employment, supporting economic growth.

  2. Global Competitiveness: The financial sector's global competitiveness enhances the UK's position as a financial hub, attracting foreign investment and skilled professionals.

Challenges:

  1. Vulnerability to Financial Crises: A large financial sector can make the economy more susceptible to financial crises and their repercussions.

  2. Income Inequality: The concentration of wealth in the financial sector can exacerbate income inequality in the economy.

  3. Overreliance on Finance: An overreliance on the financial sector may divert resources from other sectors of the economy.

In conclusion, the growth of the UK's financial sector has been significant, making London a global financial center. However, the size and influence of the financial sector bring both benefits and challenges, requiring careful regulation to ensure financial stability and balanced economic growth.

Monday, 15 July 2013

How Indian aviation was destroyed

Kingshuk Nag in Times of India
Have you read the history of India? If you have, you must be familiar with the conflict of the English and the French on the Indian soil in the 18th century. The fight was to seize control over the Indian markets. Now in an encore of sorts, two airlines from the Gulf region, but belonging to different sultans, are fighting for control of the Indian aviation sector. Help may have come to them, maybe inadvertently, from civil aviation minister Ajit Singh and former civil aviation mantra Praful Patel.
Ajit Singh is in the news these days for trying to ram down the Jet-Eithad deal, through which this Abu Dhabi-based airline will get access to the lucrative Indian market (Indian passengers going abroad) and enable the airline to boost its revenue.
The deal is being looked into, with the Prime Minister’s office having raised some objections, but Ajit is confident of pushing through the deal and has even called on the UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi to explain everything to her.
The deal was preceded by something unusual: at the end of April, the GOI (which means the civil aviation ministry, which essentially means Ajit Singh) suddenly increased the traffic rights with Abu Dhabi (number of passengers who could fly to Abu Dhabi from India through Indian carriers) to 36,670 per week. This raised eyebrows – including that of the Parliamentary standing committee on transport, tourism and culture which wondered why flying rights were being extended because Indian carriers did not have the capacity (in terms of fleet) to carry these many passengers per week to Abu Dhabi from India. But now with the benefit of hindsight, we are wiser. Under the Jet-Etihad deal, the latter company took up 24 per cent stake in Jet Airways. Incidentally, the Abu Dhabi-based company paid a premium of 32 per cent to acquire these shares. Although Jet will get Rs 8,574 crore in foreign investment due to this deal, analysts aver that the deal has clauses which will in effect turn over the management of the company to Etihad. Thus Etihad will ride piggy back on Jet to transport Indians.
Ajit Singh’s piloting the Etihad deal will have the effect of enabling it to catch up with Emirates Airlines (the official airlines of the UAE). Emirates Airlines dominates the market to the Gulf with 30 per cent of the passengers flying out of India to that area using Emirates to go there. Now Etihad will get a chance to capture part of this traffic and provide stiff competition to Emirates Airlines.
For those not well-versed with aviation matters, the fight between Emirates Airlines and Etihad will not be just for traffic from India to the Gulf but also for onward traffic to Europe and North America. Readers may have noted that a decade ago when Indians went to Europe and North America they often changed flights at Frankfurt. But nowadays, passengers mostly change flights at Dubai. Why? Because Dubai is the hub of the Emirates Airlines and this airlines flies passengers out to Dubai, from where they board onward flights to Europe and North America. This brings enormous business not only to Emirates Airlines but also to Dubai as a place (reason: duty free purchases at the airport and some passengers taking a break in Dubai for a few days, etc). Now within a year or so, Indian passengers will also fly through Abu Dhabi for their journey to Europe or North America and benefit the economy of Abu Dhabi. It is obvious that with its small population: the middle-east market (that is, local origin or Arab passengers flying out of the middle-east) cannot help to create mega hubs for neither Emirates Airlines at Dubai or Etihad at Abu Dhabi and bring tremendous benefits for their respective economies. Both of them can only grow if they can exploit the huge Indian traffic that flies from India to the Gulf and to Europe and North America.
Ajit Singh’s action may have the effect of providing level playing field for Abu Dhabi-vis-a-vis Emirates  But the man whose actions resulted in out of the ordinary benefits to Emirates was Praful Patel, who was civil aviation minister for seven years from May 2004 to January 2011. He is the man whose tenure, analysts say, saw the beginning of destruction of the Indian aviation sector. This is even as Emirates got empowered and Dubai became a global hub.
When Praful came to the civil aviation ministry with the formation of the UPA government, Air India was the market leader in India with 42 per cent market share. A proposal had been mooted by the earlier NDA government to augment the fleet of Air India by 28 but the deal had not been finalized. When the proposal came to Praful he raised the numbers to 68 with one stroke of the pen and raised the cost to Rs 50,000 crore. All this was done without any revenue plan or even a route map to deploy so many additional aircraft. The beneficiary was Boeing from whom 27 Dreamliners were proposed to be bought. The Dreamliner was then only on the drawing board. The additional secretary and financial adviser in the civil aviation ministry V Subramanian opposed the move but he was shunted off. Analysts also questioned why an airline with a turnover of Rs 7,000 crore should place orders of Rs 50,000 crore with no idea of how to use the planes. This would only put a huge debt burden on the airline and damage it badly. Interestingly the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG), which looked at the deal later, reported: “The acquisition appears to be supply driven ... the increase in number does not withstand audit scrutiny, considering the market requirement ... or forecast of the future, also the commercial viability projected to justify the acquisition...”
Caught on the wrong foot due to this acquisition, Patel did something else which virtually rang the death knell for Air India. He merged Air India and Indian Airlines arguing that this would create a much larger aviation entity that could compete better and also utilize the new aircraft which had been ordered. But in the event, this has had the effect of creating a monstrosity and mounting losses. Even today the new entity – which is called Air India – is plagued by severe HR problems arising out of the merger.
As if this was not enough, the airline was forced to vacate (no one till day knows why) its lucrative routes where foreign airlines and even airlines like Jet stepped in. As a good example, in October 2009, Air India decided to opt out of the Kozhikode-Doha-Bahrain route. This was one of the highest-revenue-earning flights of the airline and it was a route which was 511 seats short per week. No reasons were given for the withdrawal and in a short while foreign airlines moved in to exploit the readymade market. The airline’s unions protested but to no effect. Interestingly as early as May 2005 in a confidential memo to the cabinet secretary, the then managing director of Indian Airlines (the merger had not taken place then) complained that the Indian Airlines was being forced by the civil aviation minister and his officer on special duty to take financially damaging and commercially unviable decisions. These included forcing IA to make way for other operators. The MD said that he was forced to seek flight slots for the airlines in the UK and USA during the winter schedule (when traffic was lesser) even as other airlines were allowed to fly to the destinations in summer. Nothing came of the complaints: the managing director made way but the minister continued.
Now we have come to a position that Air India is all but dead, groaning under a massive debt burden and huge losses. Air India has thus ceased to be a player and foreign airlines have captured the Indian skies. This is not the end of the story: with the actions of the Indian ministers resulting in establishment of aviation hubs in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, Indian airport operators are unhappy and rightly so. GVK and GMR, which operate airports in Mumbai and Delhi respectively, wonder why the airports in the two cities cannot be built as hubs. After all the entire Indian traffic that is going to the west through the middle-east can easily be sent to the final destinations through Mumbai or Delhi, if hubs are developed there. This is especially because the long-haul Dreamliner planes are now being inducted into the fleet of Air India. These planes can fly nonstop to any part of the globe. In this way they are a threat to the concept of mid way hubs.
For those who may not be aware, Praful Patel, who represents the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP), comes from a beedi-manufacturing family. After his father died, Patel a product of Campion School and Sydenham College in Mumbai, took over the business and expanded it. The Mumbai schooling made him savvy, running the business from a young age made him street smart. He is popularly known as the beedi king of India.The family company, Ceejay group, rolls over 60 million beedi sticks a year. The beedi leaves are grown in central India, and Patel’s constituency in Bhandara-Gondia although in Maharashtra is not far from Chhattisgarh. Praful Patel’s father also doubled up as a politician and the son followed in his footsteps becoming an MP for the first time in 1991. The UPA government being a coalition government, Patel’s actions were tolerated for a long time. But in the end he was removed and pushed to the heavy industry ministry as full-fledged cabinet minister. All the while in the civil aviation ministry Patel, now 56, was a minister of state but with independent charge.
Seventy-four-year-old Jat leader Ajit Singh is the son of former Prime Minister Charan Singh. A product of IIT Kharagpur, Ajit worked in IBM in the US for 17 years before returning to India and jumping into politics. His Indian National Lok Dal (INLD) – with 5 MPs – became part of the UPA in 2011 and shortly thereafter he was made civil aviation minister.