A Perspective on the Indian Diaspora Confusion, Challenges, Opportunities….
Presented By:Ravi Sidhoo, Head of Global South Asian Business
KBL European Private Bankers15 May 2013
What will we not talk about?
India “Shining”
Other Stereotypes
What is the Indian Diaspora?
• A generic term to describe the people who migrated from territories currently within the borders of the Republic of India. It also refers to their descendants.
• The Diaspora is currently estimated to number over thirty million, composed of "NRIs" (Indian citizens not residing in India) and "PIOs" (Persons of Indian Origin who have acquired the citizenship of some other country).
• Half a million PIOs growth, and half a million NRIs being added every year.
Current Footprint of the Indian Diaspora
UKIndian Population 2.5m+Strong vibrant affluent
communityMainly entrepreneurs,
professionals.
USAIndian Population 4m+Growth rate of 106% (1990-
2000)Wealthy (highest of all
immigrants)EntrepreneurialGeographic concentration
(California and New York tri = 37% of the Indian-owned firms and 45% of Indian population).
Indian businesses growing at double the pace (34% to 19% of overall US businesses)
CanadaIndian Population
1.5m+2nd largest but fastest
growing (95% till 2017)
Middle East (UAE ,Saudi Arabia,
Qatar, Oman)Indian Population 4m+,
of whichUAE is the main market
UAEApprox 35% of the retail
banking population is Indian
Approx 25% of the commercial banking population is Indian
Asia (HK, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand,
Philippines)Indian Population
3.5m+Historic presence and
well entrenched in economy
Growth through recent migration of professionals and entry of multinational corporations
South Africa, Kenya, Nigeria, Ghana, Mauritius, Tanzania,
Uganda)Indian Population 3.5m+Concentrated in South Africa (46%)Significant links in economy and
wealthyLarge investments. by Indian
corporate houses in recent years
Mauritius, IndiaMAR is a major booking
centreStrong linkages with IndiaTotal remittances from
Diaspora at $50B + and growing
Total NRI deposit base of $47B (9% CAGR from 2000)
Strong outbound flows from Indian corporate houses
Australia, New Zealand
Indian population 510k+Large growing Indian
population mainly a NRI opportunity
How they got there?• Pre independence (17th century until end of the British Raj)
– Indian merchants arrived in Russia in 1615– In the 19th century workers migrated to British colonies, Mauritius,
Guyana, Caribbean, Fiji, East Africa– Gujarati and Sindhi merchants settled in Iran, Oman, Bahrain, Dubai,
South Africa, South East Asia and East Africa.– Started in 1890 in Canada with the British Army– Early 1900 in USA with British Army and traders during the Gold Rush– In the 19th century to the UK with the East India Co
• Post Independence– After the 1970’s oil boom, numerous Indians immigrated to Gulf countries– 1990’s IT boom attracted a lot of skilled Indian workers – 1950-1960’s Punjabis came to UK followed by East African’s in 1970s
Why is it relevant?
Political Relevance• USA
– Over 25 elected officials on Indian origin– Bobby Jindal, Governor of Louisiana– Nikki Hailey, Governor of South Carolina– Swati Dandekar, Iowa State Senator
• Canada– Over 25 elected / former officials on Indian origin– Bharat Agnihotri, Alberta Liberal MP– Ruby Dhalla, Liberal MP– Ujjal Dosanj, ex Liberal MP
• UK– Over 25 elected / former officials on Indian origin– Keith Vaz, Labour MP– Lord Dholakia, Liberal Democrat MP– Paul Uppal, Conservative MP
Economic Relevance
• Nearly 5,000 NRIs with networth more than USD 30M, Wealth-X 2011 • Top 100 Indian names have combined Net Worth of circa USD280
Billion - Forbes India's 100 Richest, Special Report 2009• The greatest concentrations of NRIs live in the US, UK, Canada and
Australia • Singapore, Hong Kong, UAE, Qatar and Bahrain are also emerging as
new wealth hotspots• At least 150,000 Indian millionaires live outside of India – Cap Gemini
Asia Pacific Wealth Report 2007.• UK top 100 Asians ( 85% Indian) worth more than USD 70B. Asian Rich
List 2012
Economic Relevance
• US– Doctors, IT Professional, Hotels / Motels, Property, Politics
• Canada– IT Professionals, Farmers / Land owners, Transportation, Property,
Politics• UK / EU
– Retail, Pharmacies, Doctors, Professionals, Property, Politics• Middle East
– Professionals, Traders• South East Asia
– Professionals, Traders, Politics
US Census 2010
• There are 35000 Indian American doctors as per census 2010• 72% are working out of which 66% are employed in
managerial / professional specialities as compared to national average of 36%
• As of 2002 there were more than 233,000 US firms owned by Indian Americans
• 71% hold a bachelor’s degree or higher as compared to the national average of 28%
• Per capita income of USD 88k in 2009 against national average of 50,221
Comparisons with India
GDP comparisons
Linkages with India
Remittances by Diaspora
2012 remittances in USD Billions
What Do they want?LocationSafetyStandard of LivingPolitical StabilityGood connectivityVibrant social lifeRobust infrastructureStrong ethnic communityPrivateA robust financial marketResearch on emerging marketsFiscal efficiencyTax & Wealth planning - international vs domesticAccess to Indian equity / debtGlobal property sourcing - India & rest of the worldPrivate equity opportunities back in IndiaCorporateFinancials incentives for start up companiesAbility to raise capital ( debt / equity)Access to a bigger marketEfficient corporate structuringCreating Awareness
Concluding Remarks
• The Indian Diaspora is one of the most successful migrant populations in the world
• While it has linkages with India, the Diaspora has an identity of its own• Contributes approx. 40% of India’s forex reserves• The Diaspora is very evenly spread, especially when compared to the
Chinese Diaspora which is primarily based in South East Asia. ( 35M out of 50M total)
• Success of the Indian Diaspora has played an important role improving the relations of India with rest of the world
• Given its smaller size and proximity to Europe, its easier to target the Indian Diaspora than domestic India
• Any government policy targeted towards India will be boosted by collaborating with the Indian Diaspora
Ideas for Collaboration• Incentives to invest in the local economy• Cultural Events held locally aimed at the Indian Diaspora• Trade Missions targeting the Indian Diaspora in UK, USA, Canada, Middle East and
building awareness• Encourage local bodies which represent the Indian Diaspora and aim at building
awareness around key issues and challenges.• Any policy incentive laid out for India would be boosted if also applicable to
members of the Indian Diaspora• At the same time there could be policies targeted especially for the Indian
Diaspora given their international characteristics• No better local brand ambassador to India than members of the Indian
Diaspora
Thank You
Questions ?