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India and the key to diversification

Business without Borders interviews Rana Sarkar, Executive officer of the Canada-India Business Council. Sarkar discusses the expansion of Canadian companies to India and why this means opportunities for growth and innovation for Canadian businesses. An excerpt from the interview:

"What is the appeal of the Indian market to Canadian businesses?"

"There are two drivers of interest in India � market access and innovation. It's becoming clear that, despite how well we've done relative to our OECD peers coming out of the great recession, the key to Canada's 21st century prosperity is diversification. Not because we're betting against the U.S., but we recognize the rise of the rest. The big markets of scale and the ones offering stable growth in our lifetimes will be in India, China, Brazil, with a number of other high-growth emerging countries not far behind. These countries are adding millions to the middle class every month and will bring billions of people into cities and into the global economy in the next decade. They're building infrastructure in years that it took centuries to build elsewhere. India is particularly interesting for Canadians because it's growing at 8 to 10 per cent a year largely off the back of domestic consumer demand � not government."

"Many people, when they consider India, think of sending back-office functions offshore, or using low-cost labour or supplies.The second reason Canadian companies are looking at India is low-cost innovation, but in my view the India story has evolved well past the back-office outsourcing. It's now about the Tata Nano, the $100 iPad equivalent, medical devices at 10 per cent of cost. Canadian companies are following this story closely and are starting to get involved with Indian companies if just not to be left out. Our mindset with India is also starting to change. A decade ago, a Canadian CEO would step off a plane in Delhi and see problems; now they see opportunity, and often an international competitor at the check-in desk. India has also gotten a bit easier for us. Its government and business class is more global in outlook and it stands out amongst the big emerging players as a democratic, English-speaking, common-law-based market where we can drop in and do business without a translator."

"So you are seeing more interest from Canadian businesses that want to expand there?"

"Definitely. A decade ago India was far from front-of-mind for Canadian business leaders, for a bunch of good reasons; India wasn't there yet, and, more importantly, you could get fatter returns in less complex markets closer to home. Even then there were trailblazers � Sun Life, Bombardier, Scotiabank and the EDC have been established in India for decades. Law firms like Bennett Jones, Torys and Heenan Blaikie have spent years building A-grade networks and are now key connectors. But in recent months, we're seeing a dramatic uptick in interest. Cameco, AECL and the rest of the nuclear supply chain are moving into the market now that we have the nuclear agreement in place. In technology, RIM and Open Text are becoming key players. Brookfield, the CPP and CDP have all made investments, and BMO has established a strong India practice. Like in any big market, seeding relationships and building granular market understanding takes years of effort, and the bulk of corporate Canada is at the beginning stages, but if they stick to the strategy this will pay dividends in the high-growth years ahead."

read full story here
original source Business without Borders
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