Weather Afternoon: 10°c Sunny spells Tonight: 4°c Partly Cloudy Night

Business

Orange and green neon signals end of a Red state

Richard Orange
19 May 2009


Few places can have celebrated India's election result with the kind of frenzy I saw as I arrived in Kolkata on Sunday night. But then again, few other places have endured 32 long years of Communist Party rule.

The air pulsated with crashing drumbeats and shrill Bengali singing.The crowds danced and waved flags. The streets were lit up by shimmering green and orange neon tubes spelling out the initials of the victorious Trinamool Congress Party.

It wasn't quite the fall of the Berlin Wall, but the Communists lost 20 out of 35 parliamentary seats in the state of West Bengal.

In Mumbai, celebrating in earnest had to wait until the Bombay Stock Exchange opened yesterday. The Sensex index of leading companies soared more than 17% in just a few hours - bad news for Russell Pinto, my office landlord, who sold all his shares expecting a hung parliament.

The business community bet that - with the Congress Party no longer dependent on the Left to support its majority - much-needed economic reforms will kick back into gear. At a national level, that hope may be fulfilled. But in Kolkata, the businessmen I met were ambivalent.

"The Communist party in Kolkata is what Congress is to India," the local head of one of India's biggest advertising agencies explained. "They are the party of stability. Businessmen have their established channels of communication now."

Mamata Banerjee, the rabble-rousing leader of Trinamool Congress, is seen as capricious, irresponsible and incapable of administration. She may be a Congress ally fighting what she sees as "Stalinism". But she is also more anti-business than the Communists.

She won the grass roots by protesting the Communist government's land acquisition for Tata Motors' Nano car factory and a chemicals plant, engineering a major political crisis. So while India's capitalists hail the Communists' defeat, in Kolkata they were trounced for being too capitalist.

* Steve Forbes, editor-in-chief of the "capitalist tool", as Forbes magazine likes to call itself, is in Mumbai tomorrow to launch an Indian edition with a glamorous bash at the Taj. But does this really mark a further step by India into the capitalist fold? The launch was delayed a full nine months by objections from various ministries.

* Jeffrey Archer is here on his latest book tour, and the huge coverage may be reminding him of his own days of high office. His blog notes that he discussed Corus and Jaguar with Noel Tata, half-brother of Tata's chairman. Then on Sunday, he told an audience he expects India's prime minister to make him transport minister.

Reader views (0)

 Add your view

No comments have so far been submitted.


Add your comment

 

Terms and conditions Make text area bigger You have  characters left.

We welcome your opinions. This is a public forum. Libellous and abusive comments are not allowed. Please read our House Rules.

For information about privacy and cookies please read our Privacy Policy.


 

 

  • Slump looms in eurozone as economy takes a dive Euro Europe's lingering debt crisis has pushed the eurozone closer to recession as the beleaguered single currency bloc's economy shrank for the...
  • Sports Direct is on right track Mike Ashley Sports Direct is on track to hit its "super-stretch" profit targets this year, passing the first hurdle that could see it hand founder Mike...
  • Bank may turn off printing presses as inflation drops Mervyn King The Bank of England's latest £50 billion burst of quantitative easing may be the last time it needs to resort to the printing presses
  • Online orders on mobiles lift Domino's Pizza Domino's Pizza UK said its online sales have powered ahead to account for more than half of delivered sales
  • Debt deadline: Greece on brink Hopes were rising that Greece will sign up to the first €130 billion (£109 billion) bailout from the European Union and International Monetary Fund
  • Frothy profits at Heineken Beer The economy might be in dire straits but Brits still love a pint down the pub
  • French banks face battering on exposure to Greek debt French banks look set to take one of the biggest haircuts on Greek debt as the country's largest, BNP Paribas, has said it had raised its provisions on Greek sovereign bonds to 75%
  • Thorntons calls in a former Gunner to help turnaround Thorntons The chocolatier Thorntons has turned to the former boss of Arsenal football club to turn around its fortunes
  • LandSecs £1bn joint venture for Victoria A £1 billion-plus redevelopment is on the way at Victoria station
  • Morgan Crucible results surge on emerging market growth Morgan Crucible reported highest-ever full-year results, helped by strong performance across both its divisions, and reiterated that 2012 growth would be driven by new products and emerging markets
  •  
    Market Roundup
    WEDNESDAY UPDATE

    Barclaycard's exit leaves CPP with an identity crisis

    Bye bye Barclaycard. Nearly a year since the FSA started investigating CPP over its sales techniques, the identity theft protection firm touched a new, all-time low today after admitting it was losing one of its most high-profile clients

    More