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« Africa needs infrastructure boost - Cameroon's PM | Main | India may run out of water by 2020: World Bank »

November 26, 2006

How India's rich are plugging gaps in power and transportation

By Andy Mukherjee Bloomberg

It's easy, perhaps too easy, to become pessimistic about India's deficient infrastructure. Everything from potholed roads and clogged airports to frequent power blackouts and creaking urban transportation would appear to be daunting, if not intractable, shortcomings.

Sure, the challenges are humonguous, and the pace of their resolution is slow. The highly indebted Indian government hasn't the wherewithal to make a decisive improvement, which is estimated to require additional spending equal to 3.4 percent of gross domestic product. That's almost three-quarters of what India is spending on transportation, power, water, irrigation, communications and storage capacity in a year.

The case for glumness is probably overstated.

Private enterprise is playing an increasingly important role. Inadequate public spending is still a huge constraint, yet domestic non-state companies are slowly taking the lead in allocating much-needed capital to some of India's most overlooked requirements.

Full Story...

Posted by rjorr at November 26, 2006 3:44 PM