Ratan Naval Tata, born on 28 December 1937, Bombay [now Mumbai],
India, and who passed away on 9 October 2024, aged 86, Mumbai, was an Indian
businessman who became chairman (1991–2012 and 2016–17) of the Tata Group,
a Mumbai-based conglomerate.
A member of a prominent family of Indian
industrialists and philanthropists, he was educated at Cornell University,
Ithaca, New York, where he earned a B.S. (1962) in architecture before
returning to work in India. He gained experience in a number of Tata Group
businesses and was named director in charge (1971) of one of them, the National
Radio and Electronics Co. He became chairman of Tata Industries a decade later
and in 1991 succeeded his uncle, J.R.D. Tata, as chairman of the Tata
Group.
Upon assuming leadership of the conglomerate, Tata
aggressively sought to expand it, and increasingly he focused on globalizing
its businesses. In 2000 the group acquired London-based Tetley Tea for $431.3
million, and in 2004 it purchased the truck-manufacturing operations of South
Korea’s Daewoo Motors for $102 million. In 2007 Tata Steel completed the
biggest corporate takeover by an Indian company when it acquired the giant
Anglo-Dutch steel manufacturer Corus Group for $11.3 billion.
In 2008 Tata oversaw Tata Motors’ purchase of
the elite British car brands Jaguar and Land Rover from the Ford
Motor Company. The $2.3 billion deal marked the largest-ever acquisition by an
Indian automotive firm. The following year the company launched the Tata Nano,
a tiny rear-engined, pod-shaped vehicle with a starting price of approximately
100,000 Indian rupees, or about $2,000. Although only slightly more than 10
feet (3 metres) long and about 5 feet (1.5 metres) wide, the highly touted
“People’s Car” could seat up to five adults and, in Tata’s words, would provide
a “safe, affordable, all-weather form of transport” to millions of middle- and
lower-income consumers both in India and abroad. In December 2012 Tata retired
as chairman of the Tata Group. He briefly served as interim chairman beginning
in October 2016 following the ouster of his successor, Cyrus Mistry. Tata
returned to retirement in January 2017 when Natarajan Chandrasekaran was
appointed chairman of the Tata Group.
Among many other honours accorded him during his
career, Tata received the Padma Bhushan and the Padma Vibhushan, two of India’s
most distinguished civilian awards, in 2000 and 2008, respectively. Tata passed
away on 9 October 2024, after being briefly hospitalized for age-related
ailments.
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