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By Devangshu Dutta (Coulmn in The Financial Express
on 18 May 2006)
When I am at the receiving end of expectations, business plans
and such like, of companies that are looking to ride the current
retail boom in India, one thing stands out, and scares me the
most: the opening slides, paragraphs or pages that are devoted
to the "opportunity presented by India's booming middle class
and its rising income".
In the previous
part to this column ("The
Case of the Missing Millions", 27 April 2006), we concluded
that for most international companies looking at India, the
potential target market was in the region of 18-19 million people,
or over 3 million households. When international companies look
at the "middle class" they may be looking at annual household
incomes adjusted for PPP in the region of US$ 40,000 (Rs. 5
Lakhs, in absolute terms, not adjusted for PPP), and this population
number is what appears on the radar.
Clearly, this less than a tenth of the figures around which
many new businesses are being launched in the hottest retail
market globally (as global comparative studies are stating).
200 million, 300 million - take your pick - they're all in the
mythical range!
So is it time to put out a missing persons alert for the hundreds
of millions of so-called "middle class consumers", on whose
back the current retail boom is to be built?
Hang on - the trick is in changing the frame of reference.
Let's first define what the characteristics of the middle class
should be.
In my opinion a good starting point is a simple one - look
for a segment that is on the middle of the income scale.
Most marketers and their reference guides live in a high-income
urban India paradigm (read, Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore). Passing
out of even a second-tier business school today, starting salaries
can easily be over Rs. 20,000 a month. When you get into the
middle-management segment, metropolitan salaries in the private
sector can easily be Rs. 35,000 - 50,000 a month. This may not
sound like much money when you live life from the Delhi-Mumbai-Bangalore
paradigm, but trust me, it is still a very large sum of money
as you go further down the list of cities and towns in India.
In those towns and in semi-urban and rural India, the rupee
goes a much longer way.
However, the income scale can be defined subjectively by different
people.
So, to this evaluation I would add one other important attribute
- this middle segment should be a substantial proportion of
the total population. Clearly, a population that is only 2 to
3 per cent of the total is still very much at the narrow tip
of the pyramid. We definitely need to move further down the
income scale to find the real middle class.
The next annual household income range defined by NCAER is
Rs. 2 Lakhs to Rs. 5 Lakhs. Now it starts to get interesting.
In this income segment we are talking about approximately 9
million households or a little under 50 million people. An income
of Rs. 2 Lakhs (US$ 4,500 in absolute terms) is equivalent to
a little over US$ 16,000 by PPP, which is well below middle-class
standards in developed economies. However, in India an income
of Rs. 16,700 per month brings a number of aspirational and
discretionary purchases within reach. This size of population
is about the same, or larger, than many countries in Europe
and will grow to 70-80 million by the end of the decade.
However, as far as my criterion of significant proportion
is concerned, this still doesn't cut it - we're still only in
the range of 6 per cent of the total population. We need to
move further down the income scale, to the Rs. 90,000-200,000
annual household income range.
Bingo!
NCAER identifies this segment as having over 41 million households
- that is over 225 million people - about 22 per cent of the
total population. Large towns (population of over 500,000) have
about 30 per cent of this population, while rural India has
about half of this income group.
Earning between Rs. 7,500 a month to over Rs. 16,000 a month,
this is the population that, in my opinion, is the real growth
engine for the great Indian retail dream. This population has
discretionary income, and yet it spends with discretion, if
you will pardon the pun. It is a population that is only just
beginning to be touched by cashless spending, a population that
is beginning to appreciate the comforts and conveniences of
modern retail, and its power as a driver of markets. It is possibly
more firmly rooted in Indian traditions than aspiring to move
to western standards. It is a population that is probably discovering
the benefits of investing as much as it is the joys of spending
thus reducing the free cash available.
Many brands are ending up planning for the 150-200 million
real middle class population, while offering products and prices
that are more appropriate for the ersatz "middle-class" of 15-20
million.
Consumer markets are structured around obsolescence, replacement
and repeat purchases. If your product fits well within the price-value
equation for repeat purchases, you have a winner. If you don't,
then what you get is a bunch of occasional purchases from most
of your consumers, with long replacement cycles (or even, no
repurchase).
The end result is the sales plateau that is the characteristic
of so many brands in India.
If you want to volumes, prepare a product and price offer
that makes sense to the real Indian middle class. The small
shampoo packs make sense, the "chhota recharge" on the mobile
phones makes sense. Does your product?
The missing millions aren't really missing - they're just
invisible through our Delhi-Mumbai-Bangalore upper income blinkers.
It's time to take off the blinkers.
The author is chief executive of Third Eyesight. (
www.thirdeyesight.in
)
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