India's business environment deteriorating: GE's John Flannery
India's business environment deteriorating: GE's John Flannery
John Flannery tells Forbes India the environment for some of GE India's businesses has deteriorated.

John Flannery

Age: 51

Last Designation: President and CEO, GE India

Education: Graduate of Fairfield University; MBA from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania

Career: Spent 24 years at GE

Interests: Exercise, cricket, cooking and Sufi music

On the Indian economy

2012 was flying pretty low from an investor standpoint. The statements in the past six months have been a lot more encouraging. Many hot-button items like tax, FDI, and relaxation of diesel subsidy, are making people feel there's a more strategic view from the government on economic issues. The sentiment is good but none of these things have translated into actual core activity. So, I don't sit at my desk and go wow.

Growth pockets

For us, it's a couple of things. We need to become more localised, more competitive. Then we can grow in those conditions [of low GDP growth]. The second thing is, even in this sort of malaise, there are pockets of activity in certain states; certain companies have significant investment programmes going on there. If we can stay disciplined on localising the company, getting better as an Indian company and aiming at pockets of activity, we can have decent numbers. If we just stand still and hope for the tide to take us for a ride, probably that wouldn't be a good idea.

Ease of doing business in India

The ease of doing business hasn't changed much. The macro-environment has deteriorated for a couple of our businesses, especially energy. We have a large drop in the power generation business owing to [short] supply of natural gas. It was a great business during the first two years I was here and it has been a graveyard in the last two.

GE's health care business is not the lone bright spot

Except the gas turbine business, all the others [has seen] good growth: Water [has seen] good profit growth, renewable energy (wind is our biggest play) saw good growth. We've got a lot of measurement/control businesses related to power stations, which are still growing. So, you can take our heavy-duty gas turbine business and put it in its own box. The rest, across the board, are [growing].

On India's nuclear civil liability regime [The Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act]

We are not comfortable with it. One, there is an established framework to have the liability structures work. Two, there are a number of different countries on a common regulatory regime. And we do business in those countries. India's liability legislation is not congruent with that. And we are not comfortable.

Other people still pursue it in India. They tend to be more government-oriented, whether French or Russian. But we are a private enterprise and we just can't take that kind of risk profiles. If the liability law stays the way it is, we won't pursue the business.

What's your reaction?

Comments

https://tupko.com/assets/images/user-avatar-s.jpg

0 comment

Write the first comment for this!