Driving forward the theme 'Navigating 2022: Chasing the Recovery', the meeting brought together Global & Indian CEOs to discuss with CNBC-TV18's Managing Editor, Shereen Bhan, what the year holds amidst the uncertainties brought on by the pandemic
CNBC-TV18 marked the 17th run of its coveted business awards, The India Business Leaders Awards 2022 with a meeting of its high-profile jury. The jury deliberated on over 40 companies, personalities and entities to try and determine the outstanding achievers across over 13 categories basis not only the usual quantitative criteria, but qualitative markers including nimbleness, endurance, fortitude, inspirational quotient, strategic sagacity and sheer grit in the face of overarching adversity through 2021, and what it will take to tackle everything 2022 could throw up. With the insightful jury discussion centred on the theme “Navigating 2022: Chasing The Recovery”, the conversation inevitably veered into areas that included growth with compassion, nurturing a culture of agility & innovation, moving towards net zero,
Chaired by Laxman Narasimhan, Global CEO of Reckitt Benckiser, the Jury of the CNBC-TV18 India Business Leader Awards 2022 included Uday Kotak, MD & CEO of Kotak Mahindra Bank, Suresh Narayanan, CMD, Nestle India; Zarin Daruwala, Cluster CEO - India & South Asia markets (Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka), Standard Chartered Bank, Sanjeev Bikhchandani, Founder & Executive Vice Chairman, Info Edge (naukri.com), Salil Parekh, CEO, Infosys, Munish Varma, Managing Partner, SoftBank, and Kiran Mazumdar Shaw, Executive Chairperson, Biocon & Biocon Biologics.
Jury Chair Laxman Narasimhan, CEO, Reckitt Benckiser, said he was “widely optimistic” about how corporate houses, policymakers, and various stakeholders would respond to the challenges and opportunities 2022 would offer, saying, “I know that 2022 will be tough, but we would certainly do better.”
One of the key challenges the jury was unanimous in identifying was the overarching expectation of inflationary headwinds; Veteran banker Uday Kotak commented on the outlook on inflation trajectory and the idea that higher interest rates and hawkish central banks would become de rigueur saying, “I am of the camp that there will be steady increase in interest rates, but it is possible for the economy to grow.”
Cautiously optimistic about future trends, Zarin Daruwala said “We have seen government’s Debt-to-GDP go up, so the next 1-2 years will be about how governments manage the fiscal deficit as well as how they use monetary policy to ensure that growth is enabled.”
The jury was also eloquent on how a recalibration of fiscal and monetary policy measures to balance out growth with liquidity and other macro-economic indicators would automatically point to a redrawing of the global commercial and economic landscape, a shake-up of the status quo, and a rearranging of the totem pole. Speaking on the impact of rising interest rates, Munish Varma of SoftBank said, “Capital will get expensive, and valuations of private companies will get recalibrated as interest rates go up and liquidity tightens. However, businesses with strong fundamentals will receive capital.”