I will be pretty plain - the attitude of small retailers is plain restrictive trade practise. WIll elaborate below.
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Originally Posted by WindRide Or is all the hue-and-cry just petty vote-bank politics? |
Obviously bank politics; votes are plain bonuses.
500 INR per retailer per election x 50,000 retailers in KL = INR 2,50,00.000 per party per election. A big chain will drive away demands for political contributions. May be, 5 lakh per chain per political party.
Before you proceed; have you guys heard of "Shrikhand". Please do not laugh. I too had had heard only of this thing. That is, till Reliance opened their Malls in KL. Shrikhand was unavailable in KL till the big retai chains opened here.
Most "kirana" stores in KL, at best, store, may be 3/4 varieties of rice. Sorry, I have very different tastes from the typical Malayalee. I find the variety provided by these guys inadequate.
That said, Varkey's, a local chain opened a shop near my home. I thought the retailers will shut shop pretty fast. But, - believe it or not - the local retailers began better variety, more items better stock, and drove Varkey's out of business. (of course, there were other reasons for Varkey's downsizing their chain size).
Competition always helps.
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Originally Posted by mayankjha1806 Do we know how much is Food wastage in India, because the Government godowns are limited and they dont have space to store more? Last year alone it was 12+ Billion $ worth of food was wastage. |
True; but bad reason for allowing FDI. There is something called "diminishing marginal returns".
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Do we know how much a farmer sells his produce for and the middleman take the rest?
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+1. When Reliance paid cash down for their purchases in MP / UP, they were driven out by the middle men. Because the farmer's dependence on the middlemen was being broken.
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We are constantly short of food
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Stand on top of one of those wheat mountains in Punjab, and repeat that. ;-D
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(One of the reasons inflation in food prices are highest, shortage of supply). Fiscal measures (like raising interest) are not working because there is a supply side shortage and no monitory policy can work in this situation.
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Interest is a part of cost of holding inventory. Higher interest rate means higher cost of holding stock means higher cost for middle man (whether the local guy or the phoren kompany); means higher cost. IMHO, inflation in India is cost push. RBI can disagree with me, but they need to put their heart and mind to the ground first.
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Now the problem for local nearby store. Do you think to buy something small (for everyday needs) i would drive to the 5Km away Walmart of get it from the guy next door (small shop owner) in 5 min walk?
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Nope; I will buy a bigger refrigerator and buy more from the big store every time I go out.
For me, as a customer, a big store is certainly a change. I do NOT do my regular shopping there. My regular shopping happens at the local market. The neighbourhood kirana store is too expensive for me.
I go to the big chain stores - Reliance, More, Spencer's etc - when I want to vent my spending urge. The kirana guy will never get that money. And the big name retail store will never get the money I give to the local retailer - whether it be the neighbourhodd guy or the local-market guy.
And in the end, I would like to point out - such a simple thing as a "pepper mill" that small bottle thing in which you put pepper, invert turn the lid to get pepper power - is NOT available in any shop in the Broadway or Market in Ernakulam. It is available, for me, from Ikea store in Dubai. Or at the FoodBazar store on NH byepass.
None of the local shops here store cheese. Or mushrooms. Or Haldiram's products. Or masala powders from MTR. Duh. Tea leaves? I need to scout around. A month's shopping depending on the local stores, with the above items in regular use will make me run around at least 5 KM - and existnce of most of those things are not even known to the retails. At a a big name retailer, all these are just a matter of shelves.