Economics of the Indian Steel Industry

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A01=Susmita Dasgupta
Author_Susmita Dasgupta
Capita Steel Consumptions
Category=KCD
Category=KCL
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Category=KJVS
Category=KNJ
Cross-border investment
Domestic production
DRI
Electric Arc Furnace
Electric Furnaces
Electric Steelmaking
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Excess Supply
Indian Steel
Indian Steel Industry
Indian steel market structure
Indian Steel Plants
Induction Furnace
industrial organisation
Integrated Steel Plants
Iron Ore Beneficiation
Large Integrated Plants
Large Integrated Steel
Large Integrated Steel Plants
Minimum Import Price
Myth of the S Curve
Non-coking Coal
non-performing assets analysis
oligopoly dynamics
policy impact assessment
Public Sector Steel Plants
raw material supply chains
Rbi
Rourkela Steel Plant
SACU Country
Sponge Iron
Steel Mill Products
Steel policy
Steel production
steel production technology
Steel Technologies
Steelmaking Capacities
Steelmaking capacity

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367888541
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Dec 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Steel is the foundational material of modern civilization and constitutes the core of industry, and yet, it is overproduced across the world. This supply glut is reducing margins and turning steel into a sunset industry. Steel consumes as much as four times the amount of raw materials as its produced volume, and the sheer bulk of the steel makes it costly to transport. Because of this, countries prefer to make their own rather than to source it across land and sea.

The Indian steel industry has grown from being the tenth largest steel producer in the world in 1991 to emerging as the second largest, after China. This book aims to reveal, through data and the use of simple economic concepts, the mistakes that abound in the discourses surrounding the steel industry. Its main objective is to dispel the many myths that are perpetuated by policy makers and the industry in order to benefit a small coterie of large firms, and discusses how through such favours the Indian steel industry is set to lose out in terms of margins, products and growth in technology. It covers the unique role of the Indian state in the development of the broad base of steel production, and observes the change in the direction in policy, which reverses the economic equality of the past and promotes collusion among oligopolies leading to overexpansion in capacities.

Economics of the Indian Steel Industry will be of interest to students of industrial economics and corporate strategy, as well as financial managers and policy makers.

Susmita Dasgupta is a policy economist and a sociologist of popular culture. She has worked with the Joint Plant Committee, Ministry of Steel for the past thirty years and is among the busiest speakers at steel conferences in India.

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