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India's Parliament Permits Foreign Retailers Entry

By Ashok Sharma All Articles 

The Associated Press

December 11, 2012

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Image: Jeffrey Coolidge/Photodisc

India's parliament on Friday approved the government's plans to open up the country's massive retail sector to international big-box companies such as Wal-Mart.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's beleaguered government won the vote in the upper house of parliament on Friday, two days after it had won a similar approval in the powerful lower house.

A loss would have been a major embarrassment for the government, but would not have stopped the measure from being implemented after the Cabinet in September decided to allow foreign companies to own 51 percent stakes in supermarkets and other big retailers for the first time.

However, individual states will be able to decide whether to let the retailers operate in their territory. So far, 10 states have said they will not allow big-box retailers in.

The opposition forced the government to seek a vote on the issue in parliament after stalling proceedings in the two houses for days last month.

Friday's vote came as a boost to Singh's minority government, whose image has been tainted by a series of bribery scandals involving several ministers.

Two powerful socialist groups, the Bahujan Samaj Party and the Samajwadi Party, bailed out the government in the face of a strong challenge from the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party and communist groups.

The policy, debated for years by political parties, will allow foreign retail chains to do business in India and enable the government to carry forward reforms that will shore up a slowing economy and bring in a fresh infusion of investment, which could also help farmers and small businesses.

The United States, which has long urged the opening of India's multibrand retail sector, welcomed the parliamentary approval. State Department spokesman Mark Toner said U.S. companies are keen to invest and this would deepen economic cooperation between the two countries.

"We believe direct foreign investment will grow markets in India as it has in China, Brazil and many other development economies," Toner told a news briefing in Washington.

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