''We paid the full amount in cash'' because times are profitable, said Suman Yadav of her family's new $10,000 car.
(Rama Lakshmi/Washington Post)
Vast rural market booming in India
Bumper crops boost spending
''We paid the full amount in cash'' because times are profitable, said Suman Yadav of her family's new $10,000 car.
(Rama Lakshmi/Washington Post)
DHORKA, India - With her face wrapped in a pink veil, Suman Yadav squatted on the mud floor of her village home washing clothes, next to her family's gleaming new possession - a silver-gray, $10,000 car called Swift. She said they bought it on an auspicious January harvest-festival day and drove it straight to the village temple for a blessing before bringing it home.
"My husband's new automobile spare-parts shop is doing well. The mustard and wheat from the farm is fetching good money, too," said Yadav, 30. "We already had a motorcycle and a tractor, but now could afford a car, too. We paid the full amount in cash. We drive everywhere now."
The global economic crisis that has slowed the growth of urban middle-class consumption in India is highlighting a new opportunity for businesses - the vast, untapped and expanding rural market. Some analysts call it a mere "re-balancing" of market focus away from the big cities; others see it as the fortune at the bottom of the Indian economic pyramid.
About 72 percent of India's billion-plus people live in rural areas. For years, the poverty of rural India was seen as reining in the country's economic growth. But today, analysts say, it is a critical audience for marketers because it has been relatively insulated from the crippling blow of the global slowdown.
India's rural destiny still depends on good monsoon rains and robust agricultural production, but four years of bumper crops and heavy government investment in rural infrastructure have given birth to what some analysts call an emerging economy within India.
In the dusty market along a bumpy road in Yadav's village, 40 miles south of New Delhi, sales of microwave ovens, washing machines, and 32-inch, flat-screen plasma televisions have risen in the past year.
"People have just begun getting the taste of spending money in these areas," said Ramesh Kapoor, a television salesman. "I hear of a slowdown on the TV news, but I do not see any here."
India's dizzying overall growth levels of 8 to 9 percent, fueled by urban consumption and a boom in the manufacturing and services sectors, may slump to less than 7 percent this year, economists say. But even during the slowdown, companies' sales are rising in rural and semirural India.
"Things have changed in the last one year. Today, 60 percent of our car sales are coming from rural and small-town India," said P. Balendran, vice president of corporate affairs at
About 60 percent of new cellphone connections are in rural areas, according to telecommunications industry figures. Passenger-car sales rose by almost 22 percent and motorcycle sales by 15 percent in the rural areas last month, compared with last year, according to the Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers.
Textile and clothing retailers that focused on small towns grew faster than those that focused on urban areas, and sales of consumer goods grew by 20 percent in the rural market, compared with urban growth of 17 percent, said Technopak, a research firm that tracks consumption patterns.
A recent report, titled "Kisan Is King" ("Farmer Is King") by the financial services firm India Infoline, found that the number of rural middle-class homes has grown by 135 percent since 2001 and accounts for 45 percent of total national demand for many consumer products.![]()


