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Fahad Hasin's avatar

Great food for thought as always! On using the framework of market failure for China, I have a few thoughts/questions:

1. Efficient market hypothesis would suggest that if an actor is irrational, they will be exploited by the market. So, China subsidising exports is basically a subsidy for consumers worldwide. The world can free ride on this. Now, it might harm local industries, and hence the anti-dumping measures. But should we apply the same logic within a country? If Jio drives prices very low, killing a few smaller competitors, our general intuition is not to interfere in the market (at least too early). We assume that as & when Jio starts increasing prices, new entrants will come up, seeing the opportunity. Is the difference here high entry costs on things that China dominates, so that it can drive up prices without competition from other countries?

2. Market concentration/power is addressed through regulation, which has the coercive power of the state behind it. Who will exercise coercive power over sovereign countries? Do you suggest it'll be a group/bloc of countries acting in coordination?

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Siddhant's avatar

Regarding the GDP growth rate, you are right it's fuelled by strong growth in construction and GFCF but there's also the factor that imports were down by 13% yoy on real values, even though nominal imports were up by 6% yoy. They have used some deflator for it, that I don't quite understand. I thought it might be due to the gold prices, but gold only makes up a single-digit proportion of India's total imports.

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