International Journal of Research in Social Sciences
  • Year: 2013
  • Volume: 3
  • Issue: 2

FDI in India's retail sector: Current limitations to future aspirations

  • Author:
  • Joshua O. Miluwi
  • Total Page Count: 19
  • Page Number: 457 to 475

*Visiting Faculty, Career Institute of International Management, Barkatullah University, Bhopal, M.P.

Associate Professor, Commerce & Management, Career College, Barkatullah University, Bhopal, M.P.

Online published on 30 September, 2013.

Abstract

Retailing is the interface between the producer and the individual consumer buying for personal consumption. This excludes direct interface between the manufacturer and institutional buyers such as the government and other bulk customers. A retailer is one who stocks the producer's goods and is involved in the act of selling it to the individual consumer, at a margin of profit. As such, retailing is the last link that connects the individual consumer with the manufacturing and distribution chain. The retail industry in India is of late often being hailed as one of the sunrise sectors in the economy. AT Kearney, the well-known international management consultancy, recently identified India as the ‘second most attractive retail destination’ globally from among thirty emergent markets. It has made India the cause of a good deal of excitement and the cynosure of many foreign eyes. With a contribution of 14% to the national GDP and employing 7% of the total workforce (only agriculture employs more) in the country, the retail industry is definitely one of the pillars of the Indian economy.

Keywords

FDI, Retail Sector, Indian Economy, Consumers, GDP