Wary of Walmart, Indian traders go on strike

NEW DELHI, (Reuters) – Tens of thousands of  small shopkeepers went on strike across India yesterday to  protest a government decision to allow foreign retail giants  like Wal-Mart Stores Inc to enter the country’s $450  billion retail market.

Global supermarket groups see a huge opportunity in India,  Asia’s third-largest economy with a fast growing consumer class.  For millions of shopkeepers, though, the prospect of competing  with Walmart and other multinational retail brands is daunting.

“I only earn about 2,000 rupees ($39) a week and I have 7  children to take care of,” said 42-year-old Rakesh Kumar, who  owns a small curtain store in a narrow alley in Karol Bagh  market in central Delhi.

“If these foreigners waltz in here and take away whatever I  earn, how will I get my little girls married in the future?”

The opposition Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party  (BJP) and government coalition allies have stalled parliament  this week to protest at what they say will be widespread job  losses among millions of small traders.

One BJP politician last week threatened to burn down any  store Walmart opens in Lucknow, the capital of Uttar Pradesh,  India’s most populous state.

In a country of 1.2 billion people, the protests were  patchy. In some BJP strongholds most small business were closed,  while in ruling Congress party-dominated cities such as New  Delhi the strike was partial.

Demonstrating traders in Delhi chanted “Rollback the FDI”  and held placards reading “If you can’t provide us with jobs,  don’t take away our current ones!”

The controversy has become a lightning rod for the  opposition ahead of state elections next year that will pave the  way for a general election in 2014.

Uproar from lawmakers over the retail move led to both  houses being suspended yesterday — as they have been every  day since the winter parliamentary session opened on Nov. 22.

The opposition is demanding a vote on the retail issue in  parliament, but so far the government has rejected this, fearing  it could lose any “adjournment motion”, a parliamentary  mechanism to censure the government.

Hobbled by corruption scandals, stubbornly high inflation  and a rapidly cooling economy Prime Minister  Manmohan Singh had hoped the supermarket reform would get his  agenda of market reforms back on track.

Instead, the legislative disruption it has triggered risks  pushing into the long grass even a widely touted anti-corruption  bill that has broad political support.

Some would-be shoppers shrugged off the strike and  parliamentary uproar as business as usual for India.

“Oh, this country is so dramatic about everything. This is  all a political gimmick,” said 36-year-old Suhasini Patel, who  came to buy a loaf of bread, but found all the shops closed.