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India To Own 35.8% in Vodafone Idea After Conversion of Dues (techcrunch.com) 18

Vodafone Idea said on Tuesday it is giving the Indian government a 35.8% stake in the company after its board approved conversion of dues and spectrum auction instalments into equity to save the third-largest telecom operator in the country from collapsing. From a report: The operator, a joint venture between the British telecoms group Vodafone and local billionaire Kumar Mangalam Birla's conglomerate, has been attempting to avoid a collapse for several years after the arrival of Reliance Jio, which undercut the competitors with cheap data and free calls offering. Vodafone Idea, additionally, owed New Delhi dues of roughly $6.76 billion. Following the conversion into equity, Vodafone Group's shareholding will be diluted to 28.5% while Aditya Birla Group's will shrink to 17.8%. The Indian government will become the largest shareholder in the wireless telecom operator. [...] Tuesday's announcement comes months after the Indian government gave operators more time to pay dues on a two-decade dispute last year.
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India To Own 35.8% in Vodafone Idea After Conversion of Dues

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  • At what point is it not communism, where the state owns a corporation competing in a "private sector". If the company lost out by being undercut and the government has significant financial incentive to see a return on their "investment", it seems like they could rig the rules quite easily.

    It's an honest question with the follow up being, is this worse than pure communism (while ignoring no nation has ever been purely communistic)?

    • Converting debt to equity might reduce losses if they can avert a collapse into a soft landing and friendly sale of what might remain. Now state should stop digging and not keep pumping money into the fire but if prior liability then not much choices.
    • This is just state capitalism.
    • by aitikin ( 909209 )

      At what point is it not communism, where the state owns a corporation competing in a "private sector". If the company lost out by being undercut and the government has significant financial incentive to see a return on their "investment", it seems like they could rig the rules quite easily.

      It's an honest question with the follow up being, is this worse than pure communism (while ignoring no nation has ever been purely communistic)?

      Was it communism when the US Government did it [nytimes.com] and owned a majority of the company?

    • This is an organization (the Indian state) trading a debt for an equity stake in the troubled business. Should the business get back on it's feet, they can repurchase that stake and hopefully the Indian government will profit on the deal. The state is literally playing the capitalist game.

      In a communist system, the state would simply say they own the business outright and tell everyone to "Suck it!" while they mismanaged it into the ground.

      The United States has taken similar equity stakes in troubled car

      • Seems fair. I am not familiar with this history in the US, how did it turn out?

    • People often make this logical mistake. That you can somehow unintentionally "catch" socialism by doing things that sort of resemble characteristics of socialism. People in socialist countries eat breakfast, so be careful when you eat breakfast to sprinkle a little Capitalism on your Frosted Flakes!

      Likewise, your concerns about a particular company influencing regulations is also true under any capitalist regime as has been documented since Marx's first critiques of the evolution of capitalism in the UK.
    • by fred911 ( 83970 )

      "At what point is it not communism"

      When the shareholders get fucked 100% instead of a slow fucking. like this.

      "Vodafone Group's shareholding will be diluted to 28.5%"

  • Air India founded by TATA in the 1930s, taken over by the Indian government, becoming a loss making enterprise under them, then having to be sold but not finding any buyers in 2018, and then finally bought by TATA during in 2021. Now I know that they only got some stock in the company and are not a majority stakeholder, but I wonder if we will be reading a success story many years later, or resign ourselves to the saying history repeats itself.

I THINK THEY SHOULD CONTINUE the policy of not giving a Nobel Prize for paneling. -- Jack Handley, The New Mexican, 1988.

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