Tag: Economic Stimulus

  • India’s GDP contracts, revival of demand will be a gradual process

    India’s GDP contracts, revival of demand will be a gradual process

    NEW DELHI: Recording the worst slump since India started releasing quarterly GDP data in 1996, the Indian economy contracted by 23.9 per cent in the month of June 2020. According to experts, the country has lost Rs 13 lakh crore of income in Q1. The downturn, which was quite evident from the previous few quarters was catalysed by the lockdown and is expected to last beyond the pandemic.

    DAN CEO APAC & chairman India Ashish Bhasin said, “It is quite obvious that GDP numbers are not going to be good because as we know the most significant part of the industry and economy was virtually in a lockdown. It has set us back 2- 2.5 years.”

    Madame executive director Akhil Jain noted, “Primarily fear for the future has led to chaos. The industry is in the expansion and development stage and was already working on thin margins with a huge dependency on financial institutions etc. Poor support has led to either suspension of manufacturing operations or reduction. E.g. the moratorium hasn’t helped anyone much as it will increase the burden in the future. Had there been a waiver on interest for a quarter – it would have corrected the downfall to a great extent.”

    Speaking about the advertising industry, Bhasin noted that he doesn’t see advertising coming to 2019 levels even in 2021 but perhaps by 2022. “There are severe challenges, including liquidity crisis, that a significant part of the economy is facing. Therefore the revival of demand will be a gradual process. It is not going to be a sudden V-shape recovery. It will keep improving gradually, month on month.” 

    The advertising industry faced massive losses during the first half of the year, firstly because of NTO 2.0 and then by Covid2019 lockdown. DAN India CEO Anand Bhadkamkar had shared in an earlier interaction, “Certain economists are predicting that the GDP growth (that was estimated at about 4.5 per cent) may dip up to 1.5-1.9 per cent. If that happens, we will be slipping down by more than half almost. We just have to wait and watch how things pan out.”

    Now, the industry estimates for the yearly GDP stands at negative 15-20 per cent as shared by Bhasin, indicating much bigger losses that the industry had expected in the earlier months. 

    Ethinos Digital Marketing executive director & joint MD Benedict Hayes shared, “We saw an immediate 40 per cent reduction in marketing investments and spends across in the first month of lockdown, by month 2 that touched 65 per cent. It has recovered somewhat of late, but by no means back to where it was. Less expendable income and shopper sentiment mean conversion rates to sales will drastically drop below normal. This means media spends have to be more efficient and this is where we have seen technology make a big difference. Some industries like entertainment, healthcare, gaming, EdTech have seen a positive, but generally, everyone has taken a hit.”

    Industries like travel, tourism, manufacturing, and construction are expected to face the worst of the brunt in the coming months, which will further impact the GDP. The retail sector will also face some struggle to get up from here. 

    Jain shared, “We are expecting the demand to reach 100 per cent only by the second quarter of the next financial year. This FY, we are expecting to reach 65-70 per cent of last financial numbers.”

    However, the industry is seeing the silver lining in a few sectors.  

    Bhasin noted, “On the positive side, the rains have been good, and the demand should start picking up. The festive season’s start should also help in bringing things back to normal. The rural areas and tier 3-tier 4 towns are likely to have more money in consumers’ pocket, which is a good sign because the rains have been good and rural demand should pick up.”

    Arya Collateral MD Prasanna Rao, however, added that just the agri sector and rural spending might not be the best antidote to the ailing economy. “If we look minutely into the data just released, agriculture alone has shown positive growth with a share of 18 per cent in GDP. The only bright spot was the rural economy, where the farm sector grew at 3.4 per cent year-on-year in the quarter. The agriculture, the farm sector is still growing, but it might not be enough to pull out the economy from this stagnation. There is no alternative to public spending in these trying times, people are locked inside their houses and only spending on essentials.”   

    BYJU's head of marketing Atit Mehta says, "According to UNESCO – nationwide closures of educational institutes during this crisis are impacting over 90 per cent of the world’s student population, which is around 1.5 billion learners across 186 countries. Online learning platforms have become almost a necessity in today’s scenario to ensure learning and education for kids around the world is not impacted."

    Mehta further adds that with students now completely depending on online learning to fulfill their daily learning needs, the Covid2019 crisis has caused a paradigm shift, making online learning a vital part of mainstream learning. "It has put the spotlight on the ed-tech sector. At BYJU’S, we introduced several new programs to help students continue learning even during this difficult time. From introducing courses in vernacular languages to launching more subjects, our teams worked diligently to keep bettering our learning programs. We also launched ‘BYJU’S Classes’ – a comprehensive online tutoring program to offer students a platform to solve their doubts instantly. We have received an overwhelming response with almost 3X increase in the number of students accessing our app. Earlier students used to spend 2-3 days per week on our platform. As a result of the lockdown, they are using the platform on a daily basis and spending an average of 100 mins per day. We saw over 20 million new users access our platform. There has also been a significant behavioral shift in the parents’ mindset towards online learning as they have witnessed their children benefiting from it in person and seen how this format of learning can serve as an enabler in their growth. We believe it adds even more responsibility on us to provide exceptional home learning opportunities to students today. Every crisis presents an opportunity and this is that inflection point for education, where we expect the rise of a blended model of education. The proliferation of smart devices coupled with the democratisation of the internet will fasten this process. Screens have become the primary mode of content consumption for the new generation. This will further boost the adoption of the new model of learning," adds Mehta.

    Another sector that is expecting a positive upturn from here is the logistics sector. LetsTransport CEO & co-founder Pushkar Singh highlighted, “The booking volumes on our platform have picked up mostly due to e-commerce and home deliveries picking up. In the initial months of the lockdown, it was very difficult for enterprises to continue operating with traditional companies using archaic processes. We saw enterprises transition to working with more organized logistics players as the focus was on reliability in the supply chain. While the overall economy has contracted affecting every sector, it will certainly push the logistics sector to innovate and adapt faster. Going forward, logistics capabilities will prove to be a key differentiator for brands, all of whom are trying to reach their customers more quickly and more efficiently.”

    The industry has no hopes for the market to revive this year and is expecting it to reach 2019 levels by 2022. 

    Hayes noted, “Honestly, I feel the road to recovery will be long and will stretch until the second half of next year. We are witnessing something that has not happened before and will see a lot more fallout before recovery is complete as well. Restaurants, travel, and hospitality companies are in absolute dire straits, as well as high street retail, automotive, and real estate. Without support, I feel a lot of big businesses will be under extreme pressure. It looks like some economies such as the UK steamrolled into a full-blown recession, and the ripples of the western markets will definitely be felt here.”

    Jain highlighted the need for better economic stimulus from the government stating that the earlier packages did not fare well for the industry at the ground level, “The package didn’t help the MSMEs at all. The upgrade in the limits was an eyewash, e.g. the limit for benefits was increased to 250, but the investment and bank limits weren’t touched making it non-utilisable for a lot of MSMEs.”

    Rao suggested, “The only way possible from here are stimulus announcement and public expenditure outlay in infrastructure, which may bring in the channelisation of economic fundamentals required for the country's growth."

  • Industry hails eased lockdown restrictions, wants more from economic stimulus

    Industry hails eased lockdown restrictions, wants more from economic stimulus

    NEW DELHI: We are close to completing two months of the ongoing nationwide lockdown, instigated by the fatal global pandemic COVID2019, living through extraordinary times, adjusting to newer ways of working, and dealing with newer ways of living. Many businesses have faced unimaginable loss, with giants like Ola, Uber, Swiggy, amongst others, laying off employees in mass numbers, and brands like Cream Bell shutting down. Small-scale businesses, be it brands running the shop on Instagram, or independent agencies, everyone has faced dire consequences.

    Amidst all this, the Indian government announced the fourth phase of the lockdown a few days back, with a lot of relaxations (depending on a state-to-state basis), and also introduced an economic stimulus package to help the businesses, especially the MSMEs, getting back on their feet, laying a foundation for ‘Aatmnirbhar Bharat’ (self-reliant India).

    The advertising industry’s reaction to these announcements has been lukewarm. While most of them seem to be content with the new lockdown guidelines, they had higher expectations with the economic stimulus than served.

    Reacting to the new lockdown guidelines, Havas Group CEO Rana Barua noted that it is very early to comment “as there are way too many mixed reactions from the industry. So, we will have to wait for a few more weeks to understand the implications.”

    FCB India group chairman and CEO Rohit Ohri said, “India is a densely populated country and it is wiser to remove the lockdown in a phased manner. The government, I feel, is doing a great job at it.”

    Madison Media chief analytics officer Nagaraj Krishnamurthy also lauded the government intervention in the matter. “The new lockdown guidelines try to balance life and livelihood. State governments have been given more power to decide on implementation.  This is a welcome step as local government will be a lot more informed on the ground reality. Ideally, we may have wanted all restrictions removed so that crowd immunity gets developed. However, such a broad stroke easing of restrictions may not be practically possible.”

    Dentsu One president Harjot Singh Narang feels that the current situation is much like watching a cricket match as things are happening in real-time and everyone is reacting according to the evolving situations in ways they think is the best.

    He said, “(The steps) are being subjected to a billion viewers with multibillion views on what is being done and what more could be done differently. I strongly feel that at times of crisis like this, we need to let the frontline response team do its work and do our best to help them in any way possible. There will always be views (personal and public) on what more could be done for the economy, the migrant, the underprivileged, etc…. but for now I feel we are clearly looking to open up slowly and cautiously. Is it “too cautious” or “too early”, that only time will tell.”

    The new economic stimulus, while great for the businesses, doesn’t hold much ground when it comes to helping to deal with the demand-side problems that India has been facing.

    While Barua preferred to reserve his comments on the economic package for the time being, Krishnamurthy noted, “There have been very good announcements with regard to reforms. The government has used a crisis to unleash difficult reforms in holy cow sectors like agriculture and defence. Rural demand which was subdued will now improve. This will lead to lagged uplift in demand. However, in the strict meaning of stimulus which is a capital infusion, it is a tad disappointing. There is no sector-specific monetary stimulus for very badly hit sectors like retail, media, hospitality etc.”

    He added that it is very much possible that the government will come up with one more round of monetary stimulus once the lockdown ends and people get back to work. “A true picture of demand will then emerge and the government can intervene to ease the pain faced by badly impacted sectors.”

    Narang agreed to Krishnamurthy that the stimulus will help the business but there is a 50:50 chance of demands improving early. “If I try to put myself in the decision maker’s shoes – as of now the thinking behind the stimulus package seems to be – over-index and create more liquidity for businesses so they can pass it on to people as wages, profits etc, and that should increase demand overall. Additionally, push in big-ticket reforms to oil the business machinery and enable it to run faster and better thereby attracting large foreign businesses to set up production facilities in our country and keep the wheels of growth turning.”

    “Sounds good in theory but the problem is that any thinking on supply-led growth is bound to take a long time as the economic multiplier kicks in and gets demand grows. Given the suffering around us and the sentiment that has fallen sharply ever since 2019 and now the complete nosedive of 2020, this time span could be even longer. This situation could jeopardise the whole theoretical possibility of it working. However, if the reforms kick in quickly and we do get to become a producer-led economy for large business investments, then even though we will go through a painful period for some time the recovery could be more robust and sustainable than a simple consumption-led growth model that we seem to have until 2018.” he added.

    Both Narang and Ohri said that it would have been better if the government had put money directly in consumer’s hands.

    Ohri suggested relief in taxes to support the dwindling spending power. Narang said, “I would look to put money in people’s hands directly as much as possible through tax reductions and direct transfers to the underprivileged but am not sure on how much the current coffers of the government could support this and how much of it could become just a short-term measure to alleviate pain without a mid- to long-term strategy to kick in long-term restructuring and growth that truly reduces inequality all around.”