Donald Trump Time to Invest in India : A big fan of Narendra Modi's India
Mr
Trump doesn't watch
Indian TV so he missed breathless coverage of
Davos talk-fest that suggested that people talked only about potential
El Dorado that is
India, says
Kanika Datta.
So there we have it.
Donald Trump, who can safely be described as the greatest maverick to make a run for the
US presidency in the
21st century, finally makes a pronouncement on
India. "India is doing great," he told
CNN, but "nobody is talking about it".
Obviously, Mr Trump does not watch Indian TV so he missed the breathless coverage of the Davos talk-fest that suggested that people talked only and exclusively about the potential El Dorado that is India.
No doubt the reference to India was part of the
Republican candidate's belated outreach to the instinctively conservative Indian-American community, the same sort of people who turn out in their adoring thousands to fete
Narendra Modi on his US visits.
But Mr Trump's endorsement is a compelling reason
Indians waiting for the
Turnaround that is
Just Around the Corner shouldn't take him too seriously.
Let's suppose, for instance, that as a savvy, self-made billionaire - Mr Trump's own expensively crafted persona - he puts his money where his mouth is.
If you were listening to the CNN interview at which he made his pronouncement, you'd be forgiven for thinking that's exactly what he's done. "
I've got big jobs going up in India," he said in a careless aside.
What are these "big jobs"? The interviewer didn't ask-but everyone in the real estate world knows. One is a garish 75-storey gold and glass Lodha
The Park Trump Tower coming up in
Mumbai's
Worli district offering three- and four-bedroom apartments of over 2,
000 square feet at between Rs 7.05 crore and Rs 8
.44 crore (at least, that's the rack rate quoted on the website).
The second is
Trump Towers Pune, which its website describes as "two striking glass façade towers of twenty-three stories each, offering forty-six spectacular single-floor residences."
The thing is, they're not strictly his "jobs". As with his business model around the world, these over-the-top properties are being constructed by local Indian developers-Lodha in the case of the Worli complex and Panchshil Realty for the Pune complex.
Both developers will pay Mr Trump's company a licence fee to use his brand-name (and of course follow a construction template). Neither involves any skin in the game from
The Donald.
These projects represent Mr Trump's second attempt to enter the India market-a similar arrangement with another local realtor in
2010 fell through.
Mr Trump explained that away as bad market conditions. In
August 2014, perhaps infected by the same early euphoria that afflicted the business community after the
Lok Sabha elections, he said he was confident things were turning around.
Still, when asked, he did not detail investment plans for India. Nor has he cared to do so any time since.
We know Mr Trump can't open his mouth without saying something zany, however unwittingly. On that particular trip, he also said real-estate prices in Mumbai were "unbelievably low".
This comment is hilarious by any standards and especially when it comes from someone like Mr Trump, with his trumpeted knowledge of global realty.
As a sharp assessment by Sunainaa Chadha in Firstpost put it at the time, "Either he does not know, or he is pretending not to know, that Mumbai's property is high cost because of artificial restrictions on land supplies by politicians and businessmen
... And as for low prices, that's a laugh. Mumbai is actually the sixteenth most expensive place in the world to own prime residential property."
Even assuming the best-case scenario - that Mr Trump knows what he is talking about at all times - his comment is a good example of why it is inadvisable for businessmen to dabble in politics.
Like former
Vice President Dick Cheney, he has demonstrated that his world view is circumscribed by the ambit of his business interests. In Mr Cheney's case, it was his former association with oil field services company
Halliburton, which played such an influential role in inflicting lasting damage the geopolitics of
West Asia.
Mr Trump, who leads the
2016 Republican primary with a 41 per cent approval rating, tends to see the world through the eyes of a self-made premium realtor with a penchant for interpreting rules creatively.
He struggles with the subtleties involved in public policymaking - or even just in public speaking - so evident in his comments about women, tax cuts, immigrants and Muslims.
That is why he has had no problem extending his lucrative licensing arrangement with some less-than-salubrious businessmen in
West Asia-and even some of them thought fit to terminate agreements with him after his derisive comments about
Islam.