
TV Somanathan's letter is a reminder—civil servants must roll out the red carpet for investors
TV Somanathan is not an ordinary civil servant. He secured second rank in the 1987 Civil Services Examination, holds a PhD in Economics, and has served in different positions abroad. He was selected by the World Bank for its Young Professionals Program and served several stints in senior positions. Before becoming Cabinet Secretary, he served as expenditure secretary and then as the finance secretary in the Finance Ministry where he deftly steered a fiscally responsible path. He was also a key person in the PMO during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's first term. Safe to say he knows what makes for good economics and how efficient systems of civil services work. What he says would also have the endorsement of the Prime Minister.
What India's Cabinet Secretary says matters, at least to India's most elite civil service, the IAS. After all, he is the head of the civil services. TV Somanathan, the country's 33rd Cabinet Secretary, made news last week with a missive to his colleagues in the Government of India asking them to grant appointments to, and get feedback from, people who are outside the government, presumably in the private sector and civil society. At one level, it may seem a surprise that Somanathan needed to put this down in writing at all. It should be a regular occurrence. But the machinery of the Indian government needs constant reminders to be responsive and proactive.
A turnaround
The civil services carry two hangovers from the past. First, its colonial origins. India's steel frame was built by the British to 'control' a large and diverse country. Second, its post-Independence socialist direction where the notion of 'control' moved to every level of the economy. The 1991 economic reforms reduced government control over the economy, but they also brought regulation, over-regulation. The reason that India hasn't grown at the speed of a South Korea or China or Vietnam is because the machinery of the government still holds on to the 'commanding heights'. It doesn't let the power of entrepreneurship and the immense talent of Indian individuals flourish.
An added complexity in the post-liberalisation era is the nature of the relationship between the government and the private sector. The last years of the scam-ridden UPA government gave rise to angry popular perceptions of crony capitalism. This only reinforced pre-1991 prejudices about the nature of private enterprises. The legitimacy of India's experiment with the market economy depended on it. The Modi government had to correct this perception, and it has done so with some degree of success. The fact that the government can run an untainted Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme where it actually gives money to private sector firms which increase their scale of production is a remarkable turnaround from the early 2010s.
Nothing comes without a cost, not even the best of intentions. Perhaps one of the unintended consequences of correcting perception is that the officialdom has distanced itself from those who are outside the government. Officials who were perceived to be in too much proximity to outsiders may not have got the kind of roles and responsibilities as their more reticent colleagues. The pendulum may have swung from very cosy to completely cold. One of the points Somanathan makes in his letter is that civil servants should avoid social settings for meetings, sticking to their offices. There is an attempt to find a middle meeting ground.
Also read: Civil servants are running India's regulatory bodies. It dilutes institutional independence
Turning opportunity into prosperity
It is time for India's government machinery to start taking their boss' direction very seriously. The country is in a very opportune moment. Geopolitical and geoeconomic factors favour the prospects of what is the world's fastest-growing major economy with the largest and one of the youngest populations in the world. But we need to work harder to convert opportunity into prosperity. Investors, particularly in manufacturing, are looking for alternatives to China but they will go where they get the best deal and red-carpet treatment. The Chinese learned this decades ago when they, very proactively, lured companies from Japan and South Korea which were predominant manufacturing countries. Vietnam has already learned this. India hasn't.
That officials have to be told to meet people from outside the government system is hardly the sign of a red-carpet economy. In fact, officials should be dialling investors and asking them what the government can do to make them put their capital in India. They should do everything it takes to make India an economy that grows at 8-10 per cent per year. 6-7 per cent is good, but not enough.
Of course, to ensure that officials don't feel completely out of their comfort zones, meetings can still happen in government offices.
The author is Chief Economist, Vedanta. His X handle is @nayyardhiraj. Views are personal.
(Edited by Aamaan Alam Khan)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Mint
30 minutes ago
- Mint
M&B Engineering IPO day 3 Live: GMP, subscription status to review. Apply or not?
M&B Engineering IPO day 3 Live: Bidding for the initial public offering (IPO) of M&B Engineering Ltd opened on 30 July 2025 and will remain open until 1 August 2025. This means investors have just one day to apply for the public issue, as bidding for the M&B Engineering IPO will end today at 5:00 PM. According to the M&B Engineering IPO subscription status, the company has received a strong response from investors in the first two days of bidding. This strong response to the public issue is visible in the M&B Engineering IPO GMP (grey market premium). According to market observers, shares of the company are available at a premium of ₹ 58 in the grey market today, signalling a possible gain of around 15% against the M&B Engineering IPO price band of ₹ 385 apiece. As mentioned, M&B Engineering's IPO GMP today is ₹ 58, which is steady and signals a 15% return on one's money. This could become possible because of the resilience shown by the Indian stock market despite the imposition of Trump's tariffs from 1 August 2025. Market observers said that M&B Engineering IPO GMP may appreciate if the resilience on Dalal Street against Trump's tariffs on India gets extended during the Friday session. Shares of the Company debuted in the grey market on 26 July 2025 at around ₹ 65; since then, it has remained around this level. By 11:21 AM on day 3 of bidding, the public issue had been booked 5.91 times, the retail portion of the public offer had been subscribed 15.39 times, the NII segment had been filled 11.37 times, while the QIB portion had been subscribed 0.04 times. Assigning a 'subscribe' tag to the public issue, Gaurav Goel, Founder & Director at Fynocrat Technologies, said, "M&B Engineering Limited brings over two decades of expertise in the pre-engineered buildings sector, backed by a strong ₹ 4,500 crore order book and a track record of positive operating cash flows. Its profitability profile improved significantly in FY25, with PAT of ₹ 77 crore and a RoNW of 25%. While the IPO is priced at ~28.5x FY25 earnings, a premium compared to its scale, strong growth visibility, consistent cash generation, and sectoral tailwinds support investor participation. Despite concerns around valuation and governance, the company's strong fundamentals, positive cash flows, and robust order pipeline make the IPO attractive at the current price band." Giving a 'subscribe' tag to the public issue, Anshul Jain, Head of Research at Lakshmishree Investment, said, "M&B Engineering Ltd. (MBEL) impresses with its 75% market share in self-supported roofing, a 25%+ ROE, and over 9,500 completed projects—underscoring leadership in India's PEB sector. Backed by strong order books, scalable operations, and strategic in-house design, MBEL is primed to ride the structural boom. Its export reach and experienced management further solidify its growth story. However, overdependence on PEBs and promoter-linked transactions raises governance and concentration risks. Despite these, MBEL's financial strength and sectoral demand tailwinds make it a compelling play. We believe the company offers solid long-term potential in infrastructure-driven growth. Verdict: Subscribe for sustained value creation." However, Shivani Nyati, Head of Wealth at Swastika Investmart, has assigned a 'avoid' tag to the public issue, saying, "The company is a key player in the PEB segment, catering to diverse industries. It has executed nearly 9,500 projects across its Phenix and Proflex divisions as of March 31, 2025. While profit after tax has grown, revenue has been inconsistent over the past three years. The IPO appears to be aggressively valued, based on which current conservative investors may consider avoiding this issue." In addition, Canara Bank Securities, Cholamandalam Securities, Marwadi Shares and Finance, Nirmal Bang, Reliance Securities, SMIFS and Ventura Securities have also assigned a 'subscribe' tag to the M&B Engineering IPO. Disclaimer: The views and recommendations above are those of individual analysts or brokerage companies, not Mint. We advise investors to check with certified experts before making any investment decisions.


Economic Times
30 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Unfortunate that US chose to adopt punitive measures against India: SJM on US tariffs
ANI Swadeshi Jagran Manch welcomes government's decisive action against Pakistan-supported terrorism The Swadeshi Jagran Manch (SJM) on Friday slammed the US for applying "coercive tactics" on India to gain access to Indian markets in sensitive sectors, and asked the government to stay firm on its stance to protect national interest. While trade threats will ultimately harm US consumers by driving up domestic inflation, for India, any "short-term losses" will only strengthen the imperative of becoming self-reliant in critical sectors, the RSS affiliate added. The SJM was reacting to US President Donald Trump announcing a 25% tariff on India and an additional penalty for New Delhi's purchases from Russia."The SJM expresses deep concern over US President Donald Trump's recent statement threatening 'unspecified penalties' against India's trade ties with Russia, in addition to the already announced 25 percent tariff hike," the Manch's national co-convenor Ashwani Mahajan said in a statement. He said India's sovereign right to procure defence equipment to strengthen self-reliance in defence production and to secure crude oil at the most competitive prices, essential to keeping domestic inflation under check, cannot be subjected to external pressure. If Washington believes that such "coercive tactics" can sway India's decisions, it must recognise that today's India is not the India of a decade ago, he added."The SJM urges the government of India to maintain its firm stance and to use this moment to strengthen strategic autonomy, protect national interest, and advance a truly multi-polar and equitable global trade order, and make a decisive move towards 'Aatmanirbhar Bharat'," Mahajan said."We are emerging as a global power, demonstrated decisively during Operation Sindoor, and committed to building robust indigenous capabilities in arms production. The United States, too, needs to move beyond the inertia of a unipolar world view and embrace the reality of a multi-polar, cooperative order," he said. "The SJM believes this is a moment to accelerate diversification of trade beyond traditional partners, deepening ties with Latin America, Africa, the expanded BRICS bloc, and the Global South. While the US remains India's largest trading partner, trade must always serve mutual benefit - not be used as an instrument of pressure," he added. Mahajan said it is "unfortunate" that the US has chosen to adopt punitive measures against India, which is a strategic partner of the country, at a time when the world must collectively respond to the far greater challenge posed by China's weaponisation of trade and global value chains. Beijing's restrictions on rare earth exports is causing huge harm to manufacturing capacities worldwide, he said. Rather than resorting to building pressure, the US should strengthen cooperation with India to build resilient, diversified, and equitable global supply chains, he added. "We congratulate the government of India for standing firm against pressure during the ongoing India-US Free Trade Agreement (FTA) negotiations despite threats of reciprocal tariffs and the missed deadlines of July 9 and July 31," the SJM national co-convenor said. Indian negotiators have "rightly" resisted attempts to force open our markets to genetically modified (GM) agricultural products, dairy imports, and other sensitive sectors, he added. "It is worth noting that the US continues to exert pressure on multiple countries to lower tariffs outside the framework of WTO rules, often invoking non-trade considerations under the guise of reciprocity," Mahajan said. "The key sticking points in the current negotiations remain the US demand for market access for GM crops, deregulation of medical devices, and unrestricted cross-border data flows," he has legitimately sought exemptions from steel, automobile, and pharmaceutical tariffs and defended its policy of data localisation, he added "India's 'principled stand' that GM food imports threaten both our biodiversity and food security, and that sensitive data must remain within sovereign control is fully aligned with our long-term national interest," the senior SJM functionary said. "We must avoid concessions that undermine our farmers, small-scale industries, or long-term economic self-reliance." he said. The experience of recent years has shown that India can leverage shifting global trade patterns, including those "resulting from US-China tensions", to its advantage without compromising core interests, he added.


Indian Express
30 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Indian economy devastated by five Modi-inflicted shocks: Congress
The Congress on Friday claimed that the Indian economy has been well and truly devastated by a series of 'five Modi-inflicted shocks', and said the government as well as its cheerleaders are being economical with the truth of the real state of the economy. Congress general secretary in-charge communications Jairam Ramesh said the Modi government, its drumbeaters and cheerleaders are living in a make-believe world. The opposition party's assertions came a day after former Congress president and Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha Rahul Gandhi said everybody except Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman know that the country's economy is 'dead'. In a post on X, Ramesh said, 'Over the past decade, the Indian economy has been well and truly devastated by a series of five Modi-inflicted shocks. Nobody else can be held responsible.' He said demonetisation completely disrupted our growth momentum and destroyed the livelihoods of crores of Indians. 'A fundamentally flawed GST–that is a Tax that is neither Good nor Simple–has wreaked havoc on thousands of business enterprises across the country, except the large companies who can afford to pay the cost associated with GST compliance,' Ramesh said. He further claimed that the record imports from China have led to the closure of lakhs of MSMEs across the country–in Gujarat alone, around a third of the MSMEs in the stainless steel industry have shut down their operations. Exports in key areas are dependent on imports of raw materials, components, and intermediates from China, he said. Ramesh pointed out that private investment has lost the buoyancy it demonstrated during 2004-14. 'Indian industrialists are acquiring citizenship of other countries in an ever increasing measure. The politically motivated and extortionist Raid Raj, coupled with the proliferation of Modani's tentacles, has led to a loss of confidence in the Indian economy,' Ramesh alleged. He argued that wages for the majority of Indians have stagnated in the last decade, across sectors and across classes. 'This is particularly so in rural India. Household savings have fallen sharply just as household debt has ballooned. Private mass consumption, one of the key drivers of growth, is sputtering just as luxury consumption has not ebbed, clearly pointing to sharpening economic inequalities,' the Congress leader said. 'The Modi government, its drumbeaters and cheerleaders are living in a make-believe world. They are being economical with the truth of the real state of the economy,' Ramesh said. On Thursday, Gandhi had alleged that the BJP-led government has destroyed the country's economic, defence and foreign policies, and is 'running the country to the ground'. Speaking with reporters in the Parliament House complex, Gandhi had also claimed that a trade deal with the US will happen and US President Donald Trump will define it. Asked about Trump calling the Indian economy 'dead', the Congress leader had said, 'He is right, everybody knows this except the prime minister and the finance minister. Everybody knows that the Indian economy is a dead economy. I am glad that President Trump has stated a fact.' He had alleged that the BJP has destroyed the Indian economy.