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Friday, July 3, 2026

More on the limits to China's growth trajectory

The valuations of the US AI stocks and its public debt binge are not the only bubbles waiting to pop. An equally big bubble that could pop is China’s investment-driven and debt-fuelled growth model. Of the three bubbles, the last could well be the most consequential. 

I had blogged here explaining the hard limits to China’s current growth trajectory. This post highlights the unsustainability of the country’s credit-driven growth. 

The Economist has a very good read on China’s economic growth strategy, with its latest focus on high-technology sectors. 

This puts China’s infrastructure investments in perspective.

The old model of growth took shape on China’s coasts before spreading to the interior. Factories in the wealthy east employed poor migrant labourers from the hinterland. Those migrants in turn, unable to obtain residency in metropolises, often used their earnings to invest in property back home. Towering apartment blocks erected during the two-decade property boom have sprung up in the smallest towns, employing tens of millions of construction workers each year and hoovering up low-end manufactures. High-speed rail has penetrated the poorest counties.

All this investment was fuelled by local-government borrowing. One tally puts these debts at around 60trn yuan ($9trn), or 43% of GDP. The comparable figure in America is 12%. The poorest regions often relied the most on debt-fuelled construction of houses, roads and bridges. This has left some places, such as Guizhou province in the south-west, with dazzling infrastructure (including a bridge 626 metres high, the world’s tallest) along with insurmountable debts. Few of these costly public works have so far come close to generating the revenues needed to pay back creditors.

As the Cold War with the US and the West intensifies, President Xi has set the goal of global leadership in advanced technologies - EV, batteries, semiconductors, AI, robotics, fusion, etc. This has set the stage for a new round of competitive investments by governments across the country, with enabling credit supply measures. 

A national semiconductor fund has raised roughly 687bn yuan over the past 12 years. Government-backed fund managers watched their coffers swell to nearly 400bn yuan last year, an increase of 75% from 2024. In December the state launched a 100bn-yuan national venture fund with a mandate to invest in aerospace, semiconductors, brain-linked machines and quantum technology. Many local governments, including in small cities, are creating similar vehicles using tax revenues and capital from local state companies. They are setting up “high-tech zones” and “AI parks” to lure innovative companies with tax breaks and other perks. These new tech businesses are meant to generate tax revenue and help local governments grow out of their debts, says Jean Oi of Stanford University. While officials wait for their homespun DeepSeek, the AI lab that stunned the world last year with its powerful model, the central government relaxes the rules to give them more time to repay their debts.

The massive expansion of investments and intense competition have generated spectacular failures.

In 2021 the city government of Yichun invested 2.3bn yuan to help build an EV factory in a sprawling National High-tech Development Zone. But in contrast to successful EV clusters like those in Shenzhen and Hefei, the facility was isolated from suppliers and expertise required to build cars efficiently. It has since halted production. The rest of the industrial zone looks just as lifeless… A decade ago a fund with local- and central-government money poured around 150bn yuan into Guizhou, a mountainous province in central China, mostly into data storage and cloud-computing. But these ventures could not be integrated with local industry. The companies building the data centres are based on the coasts, the server parts are made elsewhere and local demand for the data capacity is scarce… The north-western industrial city of Lanzhou has invested in commercial space flight and a “drone economy” project even as it struggled to pay its bus drivers for several years (asking them to take out personal bank loans to tide them over)…

Mr Xi’s industrial policy promotes fierce competition in which companies and their host places, sometimes down to city districts, duke it out. This competitive pressure pushes down prices and elevates quality. The best businesses which emerge from this free-for-all, like BYD in carmaking, Huawei in electronics or Xiaomi in both, are formidable and ready to take on the world. They are also rare—and concentrated in established commercial centres, with deeper talent pools and pockets. Profits are even rarer. Investment returns accrue less to individual companies and more to integrated supply chains, which lower costs and speed up product cycles and innovation, says Chi Lo of BNP Paribas, a bank. 

The share of industrial firms generating losses has shot to a record high of around 32% in April, up from 10% in 2011 and above the previous peak during the Asian financial crisis in 1998. Corporate debt is also high and rising. Mark Williams of Capital Economics, a consultancy, notes that Chinese firms owe twice as much to domestic banks and bond investors today as they did in 2019. In that period, GDP has expanded by a third. Companies may move away from productive activities and instead chase subsidies that are available for centrally supported sectors, he says… a trio of IMF economists calculated last year, China’s “total factor productivity” (which captures how efficiently both capital and workers are used) was 1.2% lower than it would have been in the absence of industrial policy over the past decade or so. GDP was 2% lower, equivalent to forgoing around $400bn in value added each year. The more companies get caught up in the chase for subsidies and, by slashing their prices, for customers, the harder it will be for them to wring out profits.

China faces a confluence of headwinds - slowing economy; weakening aggregate demand and consumer sentiments (with persistent low domestic consumption); ten quarters of factory deflation (PPI −2.6%) (involution or neijuan); the property market still in crisis and recovery perhaps still a few years away; local governments deeply indebted; large excess capacity across industries; growing backlash among trade partners against surging Chinese exports; intense competition among domestic companies squeeze margins and are leaving companies running losses; and zombie firms kept alive by local and central government subsidies, cheap credit, and debt repayment rescheduling. 

Each panel below is a single number with its recent track. Red is contracting or dangerous; amber is stalling; green is the part still running hot, which is exactly where the next overcapacity is building.

In an environment where consumption is weak, any squeeze on investment and reduction of exports (due to rising backlash among trade partners) will only lead to job losses and social discontent. This has increased the reliance on investments to achieve the 4.5-5% GDP growth rates. 

And exports are critical to absorb the excess capacity that has been built up.

After infrastructure, real estate, and manufacturing in the first two decades, the current focus of the investment-driven growth model has been advanced technology sectors like EVs, batteries, semiconductors, robotics, AI, etc., where there is also a geopolitical imperative arising from the Cold War with the US. The macroeconomic policy mantra has been to “hold growth at ~5%, protect jobs, and roll the borrowing forward each time.”

All this points to the model of a giant economy-scale Ponzi scheme where investment is shifting from one sector to another in order to sustain a target GDP growth rate and prevent job losses, while also accumulating a growing pile of massive debts. 

A debt-funded model works only while each new yuan of credit produces enough output to service it. In China, that link has snapped: credit keeps compounding while nominal growth fades - the classic signature of a system paying old debts with new ones.

The cleanest unsustainability signal isn't the debt level per se but its productivity: total social financing has passed 309% of GDP, and in 2025 credit grew +8.9% while nominal GDP grew just +4.1% — more than twice as much debt as output. When each extra point of growth costs ever more borrowing, new credit is increasingly servicing yesterday's liabilities rather than funding tomorrow's, which is the arithmetic that ends the loop. And this is also reflected in the continuously rising fiscal deficit, especially in the off-balance sheet side. 

Worsening matters, these trends coincide with a period in which fiscal revenues have flatlined in nominal terms and declined relative to the economy since 2020.

As the RAND report writes, with the fiscal space disappearing, the government has relied on credit and mandates to keep the wheel spinning. 

Beijing can still mobilize large-scale borrowing for industrial policy. The central government and policy banks retain substantial capacity because Beijing can expand bond issuance, and national commercial or policy banks raise trillions of yuan annually in quasi-sovereign debt to finance strategic sectors. By contrast, local governments are squeezed; bond quotas are capped, land sale revenue has fallen, and off–balance sheet LGFV borrowing is under regulatory pressure. The most important immediate trigger was Beijing’s “three red lines” policy introduced in 2020, which sharply curtailed developer borrowing and land sales. Because land sales to developers had long been a major source of revenue for local governments, the resulting property downturn led directly to a collapse in land sale proceeds and fiscal capacity at the local level. A correction was likely inevitable because of the structural exhaustion of a land finance model that relied on perpetually rising property values to fund local growth. Therefore, localities are less able to cofinance subsidies or guidance funds. 

Policy is shifting as a result. Centrally directed (or funded) credit and investments remain important. Meanwhile, traditional cash subsidies and local incentives play a reduced role. Government procurement has fallen relative to GDP. Instead, Beijing is leaning on lower-cost directives and mandates (including procurement requirements, regulatory obligations, and selective credit guidance) that require less fiscal outlay but effectively spread the costs of industrial policy across firms and institutions required to comply. 

There are hard limits to how far this can go. 

Since around 1980, the political bargain between the Communist Party and the Chinese people was simple - rising prosperity in exchange for political acceptance. With consumption weak, any squeeze on investment, or a real loss of export markets to a rising trade backlash, flows straight into jobs. Youth unemployment is already near 18%. The flywheel is kept spinning not only for growth, but to keep that bargain intact. How long can the flywheel keep spinning?

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

The problems of additionality and technology sector skew in the public funding of startups and innovation

Public risk capital funding of innovation and startups in India is done almost entirely through the VC-driven Fund of Funds (FoF). The RDIF is only the latest effort. 

However, as I have blogged earlier, there are two important concerns with public funding of innovation through the FoF approach. 

One, would it primarily expand the investable universe of startups (genuine additionality) or primarily subsidise returns on investments that would have happened anyway (returns-amplification for private investors)? Second, would it prioritise scalable digital technology innovations at the cost of manufacturing and industrial innovations

The evidence on both suggests returns amplification for private investors and the dominance of technology innovators. This should raise concerns about whether scarce public funds are being deployed most effectively. This post points to yet more evidence in this regard. 

The Ken has analysed the performance of the Self-Reliant India (SRI) Fund, a Rs 50,000 Cr fund with 20% government contribution (the rest coming from VC and PE) to finance MSMEs, and found both concerns being validated. 

The SRI fund model is described here.

SRI Fund is being implemented by NSIC Venture Capital Fund Limited (NVCFL), which is an Alternative Investment Fund (AIF) of Category II registered with SEBI. SRI fund is oriented to provide the funding support through NVCFL to the Daughter Funds for onward provision to MSMEs as growth capital, in the form of equity or quasi- equity, for the following:

Since the start of the fund in 2020, it has backed around 750 companies and catalysed more than Rs 16,000 crore of investment. 

Nearly seven out of every 10 companies it has backed are tech-heavy businesses. Only three are in traditional manufacturing… In fact, several of these companies had already been backed by VC firms before the SRI Fund got anywhere near them. Truemeds, for instance, is backed by Accel, Peak XV, and Westbridge, while Chai Point is backed by Eight Roads Ventures and Saama Capital. Understandably, this dims, if not outright flouts, the proposition of the SRI Fund, which was supposed to scope out companies “ignored” by venture capitalists… 

“Fund managers get empanelled under SRI with the intention of backing underserved MSMEs,” said Ishaan Ajay, a development-and-sustainable-finance consultant. “But when faced with the choice between a profitable but slow-growing industrial supplier and a software platform capable of scaling rapidly, they tend to gravitate towards the latter. It’s what they understand the best.” Just consider the numbers. Suppose there’s a precision components manufacturer growing 15% annually with, say, 18% Ebitda margins. That may be a great business, but if you invest Rs 10 crore today, you’ll get only 2–3X your money over seven years. Contrast this with a spacetech company, which, if it succeeds, could be worth hundreds of crores.

“Venture funds are built around the second outcome,” said an analyst at a VC firm. This explains why SRI-funded companies tend to be tech-heavy. For every Bellatrix Aerospace in the portfolio, there’s an invisible machine-parts manufacturer outside it that was passed up… startups are generally more innovation- and tech-heavy, whereas MSMEs tend to be traditional, manufacturing-heavy businesses…

The government, for its part, tries its best to redirect funds towards their intended purpose. If it doesn’t agree with a fund’s investment choices, it expresses its objections, according to a VC with knowledge of the matter. But at the end of the day, it’s one LP among many. And when it can’t sway others, it ends up “recusing” itself from investing in that particular portfolio company, added the VC… “There is no prescription that a certain percentage of the fund must necessarily go towards traditional manufacturing or non-tech MSMEs,” a VC said. Which is the one thing that might have prevented all the confusion.

The point about returns amplification for private investors has also been highlighted in a study of IFC’s blended finance deals in the 2000-20 period, which found comparable financial returns to non-blended projects but “no statistically significant excess private mobilisation beyond what IFC’s standard lending would attract.” In other words, blending did not increase the quantum of private investment — it redistributed risk between IFC and private co-investors. 

This finding is echoed in a 2023 study of SIDBI’s Fund of Funds for Startups (FFS) 1.0 by the Impact and Policy Research Institute (IMPRI), India’s Startup Engine: A Policy Review of the Fund of Funds Initiative. It finds that most FFS 1.0 capital went to established VC funds that would have raised capital independently. It also found that “crowding-in effect was primarily reputation/signal, not financial additionality”; the government’s involvement functioned more as a validation of fund managers to private investors than as a necessary injection of capital. While FFS 1.0 delivered a 2x mobilisation ratio, it was mostly in already-functioning VC markets.

As I have blogged several times, the startup and innovation sector is going through the same journey that the infrastructure sector has undergone over the last three decades. Multiple policy experiments to catalyse DFIs - IDFC, IIFCL, NIIF, and now NaBFID - have struggled to crowd in private capital into the riskier infrastructure segments like water supply and sewerage, mass transit, solid waste management, street lighting, energy-saving companies, electricity distribution, etc. Instead, these institutions and instruments may have ended up competing and crowding out private capital in the entirely derisked segments of the infrastructure sector. 

In this context, it is also useful to ask the question whether the VC model is the right instrument for the funding of non-technology startups and innovations. 

Livemint has two long reads that describe the emergence of consumer food brands catering to the niche category of health-conscious people. Sample this

The past few years have seen a spurt in new food brands specializing in regional staples and cooking ingredients. From rural Bengal winter specialty date palm jaggery (nolen gur) to ancient emmer wheat flour (Khapli atta) from Maharashtra, regional staples are finding customers beyond their states of origin. Some brands like Gurugram-based Anveshan and Two Brothers Organic Farms from Pune have crossed a critical mass, with annual sales close to ₹200 crore in 2025-26… Anveshan sources ingredients from key growing regions—like Pollachi in Tamil Nadu known for its high-quality coconuts and aromatic varieties of groundnut from elsewhere in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka—suited to make cold-pressed oils. The ghee, made from the milk of native breeds like the Gir from Gujarat is made using the traditional bilona process where milk is first set to curd and later churned to separate the butter (this has resulted in a new category called ‘cultured ghee’)…

Venture capital funds are betting on these brands: in September last year, Two Brothers raised a $15 million round taking its total fundraise to $25 million (and its post-money valuation to $85 million or ₹781 crore as per data from market intelligence platform Tracxn)… In April this year, KisaanSay, which markets single-origin grocery items like cardamom from Idukki and black raisins from Nashik, raised ₹34 crore ($3.6 million), taking the total funding at the Gurugram-based startup to $5.6 million since it was set up in mid-2022.

In a way, these brands have also helped promote traditional farming practices with more farmers returning to heirloom grain varieties such as the fragrant, short-grain Kala Namak rice grown in eastern Uttar Pradesh and emmer wheat in Maharashtra and Karnataka. These grains have a low glycemic index (a measure of the spike in blood sugar levels from carbohydrate intake) making them suitable for diabetics and often have higher protein and fiber content compared to conventional hybrid varieties… Three distinct factors—growing consumer willingness to pay for clean food driven by a surge in lifestyle diseases, the rise of quick commerce (allowing brands to quickly test consumer response), and influence of social media platforms are reshaping the premium staples market.

All these businesses are distinct from the rapidly scalable technology startups. Take the story of the Two Brothers Organic Farms.

They use organic farming and traditional methods of primary processing to make ghee, jaggery, Khapli flour, and cold-pressed oils. The jaggery is made using native sugarcane with lady finger extract used as a coagulant. “In Khapli, we have created a revolution. We own a seed bank and pay farmers 2.5-times the price of regular wheat. More than 800 farmers grow this wheat for us in 3,000+ acres,” Satyajit said. “It took us ten years to build this brand. At the back-end, our farms are open to everyone (to visit). Consumers trust us and we have a 70% retention rate. But a proliferation of brands (offering traditional, hand-processed staples) also carries the risk of a dilution in quality standards,” he added with a note of caution.

Much the same can be said about most businesses outside of technology - food, textiles, footwear, manufacturing, recycling, etc. Building these businesses requires painstaking efforts for several years, and there are natural limits to their scalability. They are unsuitable for the VC model of funding, as the second Livemint story about the plant-based nutrition startup Oziva shows.

Venture funding, Aarti Gill (co-founder of Oziva) points out, comes with built-in expectations around exits within five to eight years. Unlike venture-backed software companies, consumer health brands compound slowly through trust, habit and repeat behaviour. “If you have investors willing to stay for 10 or 15 years, that changes the equation completely,” she adds. Gill broadly sees three paths for consumer brands: staying profitable and scaling independently over a long period, going public after reaching meaningful scale, or partnering strategically with a larger company. For Oziva, the third route eventually felt like the most practical one. And, that’s where HUL came in… For Oziva, the partnership offered distribution scale, capital and the ability to build beyond a digitally native audience.

Therefore, at a conceptual level and as a framework, it may be a prudent choice for public policy on the funding of startups to distinguish between technology and non-technology sectors. While VCs are appropriate for technology, with their smaller and rapid growth phase, the same may not be appropriate for non-technology startups, which require longer incubation and growth periods. However, in India, most public risk capital funding happens through the VC-driven FoF strategy, which raises concerns of returns amplification and a preference towards technology startups and innovations. 

This is also a concern since technology innovations, far from creating jobs, often also tend to destroy jobs, whereas the non-technology innovations, especially in manufacturing, create good jobs. The graphic below captures the problem.

Note: The percentage breakup is probably even more skewed in favour of technology startups.

It also raises the question of effective strategies - instruments and institutions - for funding such non-technology innovations. How are such innovations funded globally? Are there institutional structures in India (state or central governments) that offer promise and can be adopted with tweaks? What are the lessons from the likes of the Maharashtra Aerospace and Defence Fund? What are actionable recommendations on funding of non-technology startups? If it also requires the government to directly fund them, what institutional structures are most practical and realistic? I’ll explore these in another post. 

Monday, June 29, 2026

Indian economy's cost competitiveness constraints - a graphical summary

I had blogged here, arguing that the Indian economy faces a cost-competitiveness constraint. I had written that on many inputs, domestic firms face the cost structure of a developed country. This post will examine the empirical evidence in this regard. 

This cost structure reflects in the global competitiveness of the country’s manufacturers. India suffers from a persistent and high price disability compared to peers across manufacturing sectors. 

What are the contributors to this competitiveness wedge?

Indian factory wages (~$2.1/hour) are the lowest in Asia, about two-thirds of Vietnam's and a third of China's. Its effective corporate tax rate at 17.2% is among the lowest, its GST rates are comparable, and its logistics costs (while contested) are at least not much higher. 

So if India loses on net cost, the disability is entirely in non-wage factors: land, capital, power, fuel, scale, tariffs on inputs, and labour productivity.

Start with land, the largest cost wedge. Urban land is priced like that of a rich country, and, most problematically, hoards the nation's savings. Mumbai ranks among the world's 20 most expensive prime markets, and Indians park ~77% of household wealth in real estate. The high land valuations result in capital misallocation and squeeze out the capital that would otherwise have resulted in investment. 

In fact, high land valuations, even in the smaller cities, appear to be a big entry barrier for businesses. An Indian manufacturer pays roughly 5–15 times more for industrial land than a Chinese counterpart in a comparable tier-2 city, and 1–4 times a Vietnamese peer. That gap is policy-made. China's local governments subsidise industrial land to attract production, whereas India's restrict supply (FSI, fragmented titles, slow acquisition) and treat land as a fiscal asset to maximise revenues.

Now, come to power tariffs. Indian industrial users pay ~₹7.5–9/kWh ($0.09–0.11), materially above what comparable Asian peers' large industrial users effectively pay. Indian electricity is among the world's most expensive on a PPP basis, with one of the world's widest spreads across consumer types. 

The comparisons of electricity prices based on averages are misleading. For example, India and China have similar average electricity tariffs at $0.08/kWh. It conceals that India has one of the world's widest cross-subsidy spreads (farms near zero, industry penalised). The rate that matters for competitiveness is the industrial slab, which is materially higher. Industry overpays to cross-subsidise farms and households, again, another policy choice. To this, we must add another 15–25% for diesel backup against unreliable supply.

The same applies to gasoline prices. Kept outside GST as a revenue mainstay for state governments, petrol and diesel carry stacked central excise plus state VAT. Roughly half the pump price is tax. In raw dollars, India's fuel is dearer than China's, Vietnam's or America's, despite far lower incomes.

The cost of capital adds to the wedge. The credit-to-GDP ratio measures the availability of capital. The other half of the problem is the price. Indian firms pay materially more than peers - across banks, bonds and the SME segment. In fact, after stripping out inflation, the gap stays large, which is the more realistic measure of whether real investment can clear its hurdle rate.

The capital markets are no different. An Indian mid-cap pays roughly 2–3 times the bond yield a Chinese mid-cap pays and ~50% more than a US one, in nominal terms. After inflation, the gap narrows but doesn't vanish. India's real lending rate (~5%) is ~2 percentage points above China's, and the real MSME rate is among the world's highest. Combined with credit availability stuck at 55% of GDP, this means Indian firms, and especially the missing middle, face the worst combination of dear and scarce capital among large economies.

Let’s dig a bit deeper into the capital cost wedge. 

Econ 101 informed that the high cost of capital is a reflection of the demand-supply mismatch. On the demand side, as we have seen, the high land valuations are encouraging resource misallocation. What about the supply side?

The country’s reasonable gross domestic savings rate (~30%) conceals a disproportionately high share of illiquid assets. When 77% of wealth sits in physical assets (land and gold), and only ₹40 for every ₹100 of household financial savings reaches the financial system, the banks have less to lend, the bond market stays thin, and the price of credit rises. 

In other words, there’s a link between the land and capital problems facing the economy. The causal chain goes something like this - physical-asset preference (land + gold) → low household financial savings (5.3% of GDP) → shallow bank deposits & bond market → low credit-to-GDP (55%) → dear capital (~9% vs ~3.5% in China). The same wealth-allocation pattern that raises land prices also raises the cost of capital. It is one mechanism, not two.

Worsening matters, the net household financial savings fell from ~11.5% of GDP in FY21 to 5.3% in FY24, a 50-year low. The table below breaks down how the cost wedge feeds itself. Households are borrowing more (against assets), and routing more new savings back into physical assets

The cost constraints impact the economy in two ways. One, it restrains private investment. Second, it weakens global competitiveness and hurts exports. 

Take the first. Overall investment slid from a 35.8% peak in 2007-08. Public capex has since surged, but private corporate investment never recovered, flat near 11-12% of GDP. Flush with cash, firms deleveraged and bought financial assets instead of building capacity. I blogged here on this. 

The East Asian economies found exports to rich countries as the outlet to overcome thin domestic demand and drive economic growth. Unfortunately, in India’s case, this is exactly the outlet that the cost wedge closes: dear capital, costly logistics, unreliable power and the world's highest tariff walls all erode competitiveness. The result is that India is losing its share of labour-intensive exports to Vietnam and Bangladesh , even as its overall merchandise share stalls near 1.8%.

In fact, the Economic Survey 2016-17 chapter Clothes & Shoes: Can India Reclaim Low-Skill Manufacturing? warned that the space China vacated was being taken by Bangladesh and Vietnam in apparel, and Vietnam and Indonesia in leather and footwear. A decade later, the warning could not have been more prophetic. 

In the net, India wins on wages (~$2.1/hour) but loses on net cost. So the disability is entirely from non-wage factors: capital, power, logistics, scale, tariffs on inputs, and productivity. India has a cost structure that is comparable to that of a developed country. That's the central analytical point.

India enters every labour-intensive sector with the world's cheapest workers and exits with a 10–20% cost disability. This is proof that wages aren't the binding constraint. The wedge comes from the rest - scale, input tariffs, capital, power, logistics and productivity, in a market structure that punishes the firms that should be growing. This is why India hasn't replaced China, where Vietnam and Bangladesh have, despite the structural opportunity being identical for all three.

Indian businesses (and especially manufacturers) face a structural cost constraint. It does not have to do with taxation or wages, but with factors like land, power, fuel, cost of capital, input tariffs, labour productivity, and business size/scale. A disproportionate attention and effort go into taxation reforms instead of these more important structural limiting factors.