The government is hardly in a position to provide stimulus to industry.
That's a given. But can industry help itself and in turn contribute to economic growth?
Corporate India's answer to that is an even more obvious one: it's safety first in an uncertain economic environment, where demand has been slowing.
Observers say India Inc would rather spend the next few years consolidating its operations rather than go for any aggressive capital expenditure in an uncertain environment.
"Companies take up new projects only in two scenarios: if they are generating free cash flows or if they foresee strong growth.
"Neither of this holds true right now.
So, I don't expect any quick revival in the corporate investment cycle," says Dhananjay Sinha, co-head, institutional equity, Emkay Global Financial Services.
A demand slowdown was clearly visible in the results for the quarter ended September.
Core revenues grew just 9.2 per cent -- the slowest in the last three years.
Aggregate net profit continued to be well below the recent high.
The slow demand growth has translated into spare capacity for companies in most sectors.
"Companies typically undertake capital expenditure when capacity utilisation is high, upwards of 80-85 per cent.
"But at an aggregate level, the current utilisation in many sectors is below this threshold utilisation level.
"This rules out any urge for launching new projects.
"A possible exception may be the auto sector, where despite falling utilisation levels there is significant capex activity," says Deep Narayan Mukherjee, director, corporate ratings, India Ratings & Research.
He attributes this to the cocktail of high inflation and poor growth in real wages.
"The private final consumption growth is at its lowest level in the last eight years, as consumers juggle between rising cost of living and stagnant or falling real incomes," he says, adding low demand growth has now become structural in nature and things will start looking up only when inflation is brought down and real wages start rising.
For India Inc, the asset turnover ratio (net sales divided by net assets) declined to 1.8x in FY12 from a high of 2.2x in FY07.
This indicates lower utilisation of capital, which takes away the incentive for companies to expand capacities.
The analysis is based on the annual consolidated financials of BSE-500 companies, excluding those from banking, financial services, oil & gas and IT sectors.
The universe includes 299 companies from 51 sectors whose annual profit and loss accounts were available since 2001.
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