66 Business TheEconomistMarch26th 2022
BusinessinIndia
Sharkattack
S
peaktothebankersandindustrialists
atthetopofIndia’seconomicpyramid
andyouheara commonrefrain.AllIndi
ans,theycontend,areatheartsocialists—
themselvesincluded.Thepopularityofthe
Indianversionof“SharkTank”,atvcele
brationofcapitalism(similarto“Dragons’
Den”inBritain)inwhichordinarypeople
seekfundingfortheirbusinessideasfrom
a gaggleofsuccessfulentrepreneurs,sug
geststhatthisconventionalviewmaybe
out ofdate.The show’s 36episoderun,
wrotetheHindustanTimes, shiftedthetop
icofdinnerconversationsthroughoutthe
vast country from cricket to business
plans.Termslike“grossprofit”and“tam”
(total addressable market) have entered
commonparlanceamongits1.4bnpeople.
Showswithstarjudgesawardingtalent
(andpanningitsabsence)havelonghada
placeonIndiantelevision.Buttheyhave
historicallyinvolvedsonganddance,not
spreadsheets. Sony Entertainment re
ceived 85,000 applications for “Shark
Tank”.These werewhittleddown to 198
pitchespresentedtojuriesoffivejudges,
themselveschosentoreflectIndia’snew
businesselite(ratherthanbeingscionsof
industrialconglomeratestheyhadfound
edfirmspeddlingeverythingfromcosmet
icsanddrugstoa matchmakingappand
electronicpayments).
The enterprising hopefuls’ televised
presentationswereheavieronenthusiasm
thanpolish.Ratherthanbeinga liability,
thisresonatedwithviewerswho,asmany
blogsandsocialmediapostsattested,saw
themselvesinthecontestants.For“Shark
Tank”was,initseffervescentdiversity,not
unlikeIndiansociety.Ofthe 67 startups
M UMBAI
Whata realityshowsaysabout
Indiancapitalism
The startup subcontinent
India, new companies registered, ’000
Sources: Ministry of Corporate Affairs; World Bank
200
150
100
50
0
211816141210082006
buymoreoftheretailers’ownlabels.
OnMarch23rdGeneralMills,theAmer
ican maker of Cheerios and Wheaties,
amongothersugaryfare,reportedhealthy
margins and quarterly sales that were
higherthaninthesameperiodin2019,be
forethepandemic(thoughflatcompared
withlastyear).Thefirminsistedthatde
mandfor packaged foodshouldremain
strongallyearasmanypeoplecontinueto
workfromhomeatleastsomeofthetime.
Robustappetiteforitsproductswill,the
firmsays,allowittoraisepricestooffset
therisingcostsofcommodities.
Thatmaybeoptimistic.Shoppers’pa
tiencewithinflationiswearingthinon
bothsidesoftheAtlantic.Investorsexpect
marginstonarrow.Thesharepricesofbig
American, European and Chinese food
firms alike took a knock after Russian
tanksrolledontoUkrainianfieldsonFeb
ruary24th(seechartonpreviouspage).n
Injectablecosmetics
Botox smiles
C
osmeticproceduresusedtobethe
preserve of middleaged women and
often involved surgery. Today they are
increasingly sought by girls who want the
photoshopped faces of their favourite
socialmedia influencer, and by a growing
number of men wishing for fewer wrin
kles, fuller lips and sharper jawlines. Glob
ally, more than 14m nonsurgical proce
dures were conducted in 2020, even amid
the pandemic, up from fewer than 13m two
years earlier. Increasingly, scalpels are giv
ing way to syringes.
Research and Markets, a firm of an
alysts, reckons that the global sales of non
invasive aesthetic treatments, currently
around $60bn, could more than triple by
2030. A large part of that growth will come
from injectables. These include Botox and
other substances that freeze facial mus
cles, as well as dermal fillers which plump
softer tissue. Demand has been fuelled by
the proliferation of selfies and, during the
pandemic, highresolution videocalls.
Snapchat and Instagram filters give users a
glimpse of what they could look like with a
fillergenerated “liquid facelift”. The con
trast with what they see on unadorned
Zoom can be stark.
In America 2.4m injectable procedures
were carried out in covidhit 2020, roughly
one for every 100 American adults. About
700,000 such treatments were performed
on Germans, not renowned for an obses
sion with looks. Brazilians, who are fam
ously beautyobsessed but much poorer,
subjected themselves to around 500,000.
Demand for “prejuvenation” work is espe
cially strong in Asia, where younger pa
tients (for, despite the convenience these
are still medical procedures) want to pre
empt a craggy visage before any lines actu
ally appear. Since injectables have to be
topped up every few months, they guaran
tee producers of the substances and clinics
that administer them a source of recurring
revenue. The younger the customer starts,
the better for business.
According to a report by McKinsey, a
consultancy, over 400 aesthetics clinics,
which administer injectable treatments
(among others including things like laser
fat removal) raised more than $3bn from
investors over the past five years. In 2020
AbbVie, an American pharmaceutical firm
paid an eyepopping $63bn for Allergan,
which has controlled nearly half the mar
ket for injectables since it launched Botox
for aesthetic use two decades ago and Ju
vederm, a dermal filler, a few years later.
New products are beginning to threaten
Allergan’s dominance. Hugel, a South Ko
rean company, now has a rival offering that
is half the price of Botox. It is eyeing the
Chinese market, where the stuff is still less
common than dermal fillers. Ipsen, a
French drugmaker, and Merz Pharma, a
German one, also make Botoxstyle inject
ables. Ipsen’s Dysport has done well in Tur
key and Russia. Merz’s sales are growing
briskly in the emerging economies of Asia
and Latin America.
Some modern dermal fillers, mean
while, are formulated with ingredients
such as hyaluronic acid that are typically
found in mild skincare products. That is
less offputting to potential customers than
Botox, which is derived from a toxin that
occurs naturally in spoilt sausages. Other
new treatments are dispensing with for
eign substances entirely—though this
doesn’t always seem all that more appeal
ing. Certain cosmetic clinics offer to inject
stem cells from a patient’s own fat into
their face, or platelets from their blood to
rejuvenate the skin.
There is a wrinkle. The injectables
craze, especially among youngsters, wor
ries regulators. Botox is a prescription drug
in most places but many dermal fillers are
not. “Treatments are often trivialised on
social media and people don’t understand
the full ramifications of what can go
wrong,” says Tijion Esho, a cosmetic surge
on in Britain. Misplaced injections can
lead to abscesses or, in some cases, necro
sis. An outcry from doctors and victims of
botched procedures forced the British gov
ernment to announce in February that it
would require a licence for people admin
istering nonsurgical treatments. England
has already banned them for under18s.n
Companies offering less invasive
aesthetic procedures are booming