$2000 CAR FROM INDIA SLAMS
NORTHERN AUTOMAKERS’ RENT-SEEKING
Erle Frayne D. Argonza
Good
morning from the suburbs south of Manila !
To
continue with our exciting news for the ‘ember’ months, let me share some
reflections about the recently released people’s car from India . The array of new innovations
goes longer than that, with the car serving as the icing in the cake.
Beth
Day Romulo, international journalist who’s the other half of the late Carlos P.
Romulo who is one of Asia ’s greats in the
foreign policy field (former President of UN), featured the Nano car in her
regular Sunday space at the Philippine Panorama, dated July 25, 2010. The Nano
was engineered by the giant Tata group of companies of India , and
sells at a very affordable $2000 apiece.
As
Beth Day Romulo aptly titled, “In India, cheap doesn’t mean shoddy.” A sleek
yet classy looking prototype, the Nano would surely be an envy of many
countries up North who just couldn’t think of a car unless it sells past $25,000
apiece. Accustomed to the corrupted status-seeking behavior, the North’s
customers would do everything in the books (e.g. get credit) to acquire flashy
Mercedes Benz or Porsche and brag the same to their family circles and peers.
Mass
markets are the in-thing in automotive industries as far as the bankrupt or
near-death Northern car manufacturers are concerned. Flashy cars & SUVs
would be okay for the fractional upper middle class markets up North and their
clones down South, but for the larger billions of workers & professionals in
emerging markets utility is the yardstick, hence the affordable folk car suits
them well.
Before
I venture into other thoughts, let me declare my own deep admiration for the
Tata Group over its feats across the decades. I encountered this group during my
own research on the steel industry in the late 90s, and in 1999 their
representatives presented papers in the Manila-held conference of the Asian
Iron & Steel Institute (I participated in that conference held at the
Shangrila Plaza in Manila).
From
Tata Steel to Tata metallurgies and now to automotives, what can I say but
SALUTE! With top-of-the-line scientists among their design innovators,
including the world-renowned steel expert Dr. Mukerjee, the only way for Tata
to go is to jettison upwards in a very exponential fashion.
What
the Tata Group is silently proclaiming to the world is that the price policy of
Northern car makers is pure and plain rent-seeking practice. Look at the
Volkswagen beetle for instance, a people’s car that is now priced at past
$23,000 apiece, and that surely makes one have doubts about the ‘people’s car’ facet to the Volkswagen.
It’s
all pure and plain rent-seeking. Profiteering is a more palatable term for the
layman. Just like those Western pharmaceuticals that are produced for a mere
$0.01 apiece but sell for over $1 per pill, rendering the pharmaceutical
companies the top-gun of obnoxious rent-seeking firms.
I
wouldn’t be surprised if we’d find out that a people’s car up North should be
selling at merely $4000 apiece, using factors of production costs in their own
backyards. A Beetle should be selling at $3000 or even lower, come to think of
it.
At
any rate, the peoples of the emerging markets have lives of their own, and they
set the patterns of consumption on the basis of their own needs. Such as the
need for utility cars that are truly ‘utility’ and not luxury items
masquerading as utility.
As
per report, the German engineering company Siemens had jumped the gun, by
committing to mass produce and market the Nano in India ,
China , Russia , and Brazil . The Mumbai subsidiary of
Siemens alone will produce half of the Indian innovations (Nano’s just one of
them) that they’ve committed to produce and market.
As
Beth Day Romulo reported, “While western engineers work on highly sophisticated
products, the Indian engineers, who focus on high quality but low cost, aim at
simplification and adaptation to the environment.”
Stressing
on the infusion of social technologies to the engineering works, Madam Romulo
concluded that “all of those devices and products are the result of local
innovation, the engineers on the ground who study and recognize the needs of
the Indian consumer.”
Not
just the Nano car but also a whole array of innovations from India have been showing the way to the
fusion of quality and consumer sensitivity in the product prototypes. This is
what true development should be in terms of technological innovations: driven
by people’s needs rather the pockets of greedy corporate executives and owners.
[Philippines , 02
September 2010]
[See: IKONOKLAST: http://erleargonza.blogspot.com,
UNLADTAU: http://unladtau.wordpress.com,
COSMICBUHAY: http://cosmicbuhay.blogspot.com,
BRIGHTWORLD: http://erlefraynebrightworld.wordpress.com,
ARTBLOG: http://erleargonza.wordpress.com,
ARGONZAPOEM: http://argonzapoem.blogspot.com]
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