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An archive of the blog posts at indiainlondon.com which is no longer maintained. We hope you enjoy delving back into some of our past musings and thoughts.

Tuesday, 30 December 2014

Jiya Jale (from Dil Se)

I absolutely love this version of AR Rahman's ''Jiya Jale' from the film 'Dil Se'.  Performed by the Berklee College of Music (USA).  Brilliant.



Christmas, consumer capitalism and chapati flour

[caption id="attachment_1566" align="alignleft" width="300"]20141025_125708 Photos from Tescos, Osterley, Middlesex, UK[/caption]

Once again I have survived that pinnacle of consumer capitalism called Christmas that pervades the industrialised world today.  I managed to avoid both the worst excesses of 'Black Friday', Christmas shopping frenzy and steered well clear of the post-Christmas sales.  The madness of things, of designer labels that seek to gratify but end up without meaning and worthless.  Glimpses of Lord Sugar's 'The Apprentice',  just finished, also reinforces the pervasiveness of consumerism in which we live - whereby contestants seek to outdo each other in who can be more savvy, more wiley and more persuasive in inventing new products and services and seeking to sell as much of the goods or services as possible to those who do not need it or really want it, for their own personal gain.

It's perhaps too easy to reject goods in a land of plenty.  And it's not to be dismissed lightly.  I benefit too from the availability of smartphones, laptops and supermarket conveniences whose existence both enriches my life (connectivity and knowledge) and makes my life simpler and more convenient (access to goods in a supermarket).  That is probably the dilemma for those of us who do not want to be defined first and foremost as consumers but make use of the conveniences offered to us.

20141025_12565120141025_12563920141025_125615Susen will no doubt recall the first couple of times we met and spent time together.  For my visits to him, he took me to high-end restaurants and picnics in St James's Park.  I returned the hospitality by treating him to an hour's weekly shopping in my local Tesco before hurrying back to collect my son.  He will, of course, say that it was the most exciting 'date' he has ever been on.  Actually, for him, it turned out to be quite an eye-opener.  Having lived in very 'white, English' areas all his life, he could not believe the range of goods available at my local Tescos - including everything you would need for an Indian meal that (almost) makes additional trips to Southall redundant.  For him, Indian couples out doing the weekly shop together was also a revelation - coming from a household with strongly defined gender roles that meant his father would not have helped out with the weekly shop.

While supermarkets in London seek to maximise profits and cater for consumer demand by stocking chapati flour, ghee, basmati rice and spices, modern food retailing has struggled to make any headway in India.  Unlike cities in China, Thailand or Turkey where large, clean and modern supermarkets are now ubiquitous, India remains resistant.

20141025_125557Walmart, Carrefour and Tescos have been wanting to invest in India for years and in 2012 it seemed they might get their chance at last,  with India finally permitting foreign firms to own majority stakes in domestic supermarkets.

In March 2014, Tescos signed an agreement with Trent Limited, part of the Tata group in a 50:50 joint venture with Trent Hypermarket Limited, operating under the 'Star Bazaar' banner.  They are currently very very small fish in the potential market – with only 11 stores across the country.  India's own supermarkets only account for about 2% of food and grocery sales and struggle to make a profit.  With so much potential to modernise distribution,  reduce food waste and spoilage and cut out multiple middlemen that characterises today's distribution in India, it would seem there was plenty of room for improvement[1].

But it seems that India's consumers are resistant to supermarkets, remaining loyal to local traders for frequent purchases of perishable goods, even among the more affluent.   Large scale out of town supermarkets stocking a huge range of products have also not been that popular, especially if other infrastructure such as good roads make access difficult if potholed and poorly maintained[2].

It's not as if other markets in India cannot be as competitive or ruthless as any in the world – for example with mobile phones, low-cost airlines or hotels.  You can find bottled water or Coca-Cola in almost any village in India, so the distribution networks are also there.  There seems to be something particularly resistant to modernisation and liberalisation in food and grocery retailing.

Could supermarkets empower women?  For in India, while a patriarchal society still sees women as mainly domestic labour in the home, spending hours cooking for the family, there may be no impetus among male decision makers and entrepreneurs to push for change.  Wealthy middle class women will have servants to cook and do the housework.  Perhaps in the West, convenience and one-stop shopping in supermarkets came of age when women started to seriously compete in the job market, without the benefit of domestic help, leaving little time left for domestic chores.

I am now torn.  I know that a solid food retail chain could bring huge improvements to the supply and distribution of basic foodstuffs in India, hopefully cutting down on food waste as it brings more efficiency to the distribution.  It could also mean one further step away from any values not based on buying and selling goods, on the ever expanding wants and desires needed to satisfy that craving that ultimately is meaningless.  Can India bring better core values, more meaning, more connection to capitalism?  Or will it, too, end up defining a person's worth by what goods they can afford to buy?

[1] See 'The journey of an Indian onion' - The Economist 14/12/2013

[2] See 'Grocery retailing in India' - The Economist 18/10/2014

Monday, 29 December 2014

Capitalism, Tescos and chapati flour

Once again I have survived that pinnacle of consumer capitalism called Christmas that pervades the industrialised world today.  I managed to avoid both the worst excesses of 'Black Friday', Christmas shopping frenzy and steered well clear of the post-Christmas sales.  The madness of things, of designer labels that seek to gratify but end up without meaning and worthless.  Glimpses of Lord Sugar's 'Apprentice', just finished, also reinforces the pointlessness and pervasiveness of consumerism in which we live - whereby contestants seek to outdo each other in who can be more savvy, more wiley and more persuasive in inventing new products and services and seeking to sell as much of the goods or services as possible to those who do not need it or really want it.

It's perhaps too easy to reject goods in a land of plenty - for which many crave.  And it's not to be dismissed lightly.  I benefit too from the availability of smartphones, laptops and supermarket conveniences whose existence both enriches my life (connectivity and knowledge) and makes my life simpler and more convenient (access to goods in a supermarket).

Susen will no doubt recall the first couple of times we spent together.  For my visits to him, he took me to high-end restaurants and picnics in St James' Park.  I returned the hospitality by treating him to dropping off my son at a friend's birthday party, followed by an hour's weekly shopping in my local Tesco before hurrying back to collect my son.  He will, of course, say that it was the most exciting 'date' he has ever been on.  Actually, for him, it turned out to be quite an eye-opener.  Having lived in very 'white, English' areas all his life, he could not believe the range of goods available at my local Tescos - including everything you would need for an Indian meal that (almost) makes additional trips to Southall redundant.  For him, Indian couples out doing the weekly shop together was also a revelation - coming from a household with strongly defined gender roles that meant his father would not have helped out with the weekly shop.

And that is probably the dilemma for those of us who do not want to be defined first and foremost as consumers but make use of the convenience offered to us.

In March this year, Tesco's signed an agreement with Trent Limited, part of the Tata group in a 50:50 joint venture with Trent Hypermarket Limited, operating under the 'Star Bazaar' banner.  I am now torn.  I know that a solid food retail chain could bring huge improvements to the supply and distribution of basic foodstuffs in India, hopefully cutting down on food waste as it brings more efficiency to the distribution.  It could also mean one further step away from any values not based on buying and selling goods, on the ever expanding wants and desires needed to satisfy that craving that ultimately is meaningless.  Can India bring greater core values, more meaning, more connection to capitalism?  Or will it, too, end up defining a person's worth by what goods they can afford to buy?

Elephants, Lord Ganesha and the Indian Independence Movement

Ganesh Festival, Bombay 1987 I remember it like it was yesterday.  It was 1987 and we had just arrived in Bombay (as it was the...