Tata Steel falls victim to globalisation desire
Slower economic growth in China sparks an increase in the country's steel exports, hurting the Tata unit so badly it plans to close shop in Britain.
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London
A MOVE by Tata Steel, the second largest steel producer in Europe, to end operations in Britain because of heavy losses is the latest in the growing list of the casualties of China's economic slowdown. The prospect of massive layoffs by Tata Steel, which acquired British-Dutch steel company Corus Group in 2007 at a high premium, has arisen during the run-up to the referendum on British exit from the European Union. Such are the ripples of globalisation that China's economic downturn brings impact to distant shores.
After falling from 10.4 per cent in 2010 to 7.4 per cent in 2012, China's growth rate has hovered around 7 per cent. This is the consequence of the communist leadership's decision in November 2013 to rebalance the economy by moving away from heavy reliance on investment and exports to domestic consumption-driven growth. The resulting slowdown has affected the suppliers of coal, iron ore and oil to China as well as the foreign consumers of the products of China's capital-intensive industries because of overcapacity in the wake of diminished domestic demand.
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