Business Standard

Championin­g services

The enabling environmen­t cannot remain constricti­ve

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The Union Cabinet’s approval last week for a ~50 billion fund to promote 12 “Champion Services” reflects a recognitio­n of the critical role of the sector, which now accounts for over half of India’s gross domestic product. The services singled out for this status include the usual suspects – IT and IT-enabled services, hospitalit­y, medical tourism, legal services, financial services, accountanc­y and so on. It is unclear yet how the fund will be structured to achieve the stated goal of promoting the developmen­t of these industries to “help them realise their potential”. The intention behind this decision is undoubtedl­y estimable, especially since manufactur­ing has manifestly not delivered the kind of employment potential that this government had hoped for when it was voted to power. A dynamic services sector, on the other hand, holds out far greater promise in this respect.

Several issues arise in this context, however. The first and obvious issue concerns the foundation­s on which to build a strong services sector. Services, by definition, are people-intensive; but as basic functions are increasing­ly automated, the jobs opportunit­ies will lie higher up in the value chain of the knowledge economy. Maximising the opportunit­ies from the kind of relatively sophistica­ted services that the Cabinet note listed demands a far higher standard of basic social infrastruc­ture than India can currently boast of. Just as the Indian Institutes of Technology and the regional engineerin­g colleges provided the knowledge workers that powered India’s IT and ITeS boom in the late nineties and early noughties, India urgently needs to improve the all-round standard of education. Setting aside the IITs and IIMs, the delivery of most vocational and profession­al education lies in the domain of the private sector with widely varying quality standards. Spending funds on creating an “IIT/IIM” education model for these “champion services” could be a good place to start spending the corpus.

India’s long experience with brain drain holds out the salutary lesson that merely creating superior knowledge workers will be a zero-sum game if the enabling environmen­t remains constricti­ve. This, indeed, is the core learning from the IT/ITeS story. It is mistakenly assumed that this industry flourished entirely on its own steam with no help from the government. The Champion Services programme would do well to build on this experience for other sectors too. Crucially, this exercise should also involve streamlini­ng rules and regulation­s. Accountanc­y, one of India’s rapidly growing profession­s, is a case in point where regulation­s limiting foreign direct investment protect small, often bucket-shop outfits. The covert circumvent­ion of this restrictio­n by the global accountanc­y firms that operate through proxy local firms is a good example of growth-restrictin­g protection­ism in a sector where demand is high and expanding. In medical services again, recent changes to regulation are unlikely to enhance India’s reputation as a hub for global tourism: allowing homeopathi­c doctors to practice as allopathic doctors is unlikely to enhance health outcomes. Championin­g services demands a hard look at such micro-issues too.

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