
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Is India’s economy facing a temporary shock or a deeper crisis?
In this episode of The Core Report Weekend Edition, economist and author, Surjit Bhalla joins Govindraj Ethiraj to go beyond the headlines around the falling rupee, oil prices, West Asia tensions, and global uncertainty. He argues that the real problem with the Indian economy may not be the immediate currency pressure alone, but a longer term weakness in investor confidence, foreign direct investment, manufacturing, exports, and economic decision making.
Surjit Bhalla explains why India’s growth challenge cannot be understood only through the rupee dollar exchange rate. He highlights the fall in net FDI, the impact of bilateral investment treaties, retrospective taxation, quality control orders, ease of doing business, and policy uncertainty. He also questions why India has not fully benefited from the China plus one opportunity while countries like Vietnam and Bangladesh gained from global supply chain shifts.
For more of our coverage check out thecore.in
Subscribe to our Newsletter
Follow us on:
Twitter |Instagram |Facebook |Linkedin |Youtube
By The Core5
33 ratings
Is India’s economy facing a temporary shock or a deeper crisis?
In this episode of The Core Report Weekend Edition, economist and author, Surjit Bhalla joins Govindraj Ethiraj to go beyond the headlines around the falling rupee, oil prices, West Asia tensions, and global uncertainty. He argues that the real problem with the Indian economy may not be the immediate currency pressure alone, but a longer term weakness in investor confidence, foreign direct investment, manufacturing, exports, and economic decision making.
Surjit Bhalla explains why India’s growth challenge cannot be understood only through the rupee dollar exchange rate. He highlights the fall in net FDI, the impact of bilateral investment treaties, retrospective taxation, quality control orders, ease of doing business, and policy uncertainty. He also questions why India has not fully benefited from the China plus one opportunity while countries like Vietnam and Bangladesh gained from global supply chain shifts.
For more of our coverage check out thecore.in
Subscribe to our Newsletter
Follow us on:
Twitter |Instagram |Facebook |Linkedin |Youtube

4,129 Listeners

4,373 Listeners

292 Listeners

1,999 Listeners

139 Listeners

1,036 Listeners

1,311 Listeners

845 Listeners

42 Listeners

4 Listeners

13 Listeners

193 Listeners

97 Listeners

140 Listeners

13 Listeners