Business Standard

TAKE A CUE FROM CHINA TO CREATE 40 MILLION JOBS BY 2025

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y

India needs to take a leaf out of China’s trade playbook and intensivel­y specialise, produce and ship out a select category of ‘network products’ (NPS) such as computers, electronic and electrical equipment, and telecommun­ications goods, to boost the currently beleaguere­d export sector, the Economic Survey has suggested.

Delhi would also need to integrate the aim of ‘Assembling in India for the world’ with the government’s flagship ‘Make in India’ policy, it said. By focusing on NPS, the country can raise its export market share to about 3.5 per cent of the global average by 2025 and 6 per cent by 2030. In the process, creating millions of jobs, the Survey says.

Exporters lauded the suggestion­s. '”As the global market becomes more and more competitiv­e, we completely agree with the assessment of the Economic Survey that India needs to focus on core competenci­es and value additions even as we are doing some catch up with China,” said

Engineerin­g

Exports Promotion

Council India

Chairman Ravi

Sehgal.

There has been success in cutting import of consumer electronic items from China, it adds, via incentives to domestic manufactur­ing and imposing of tariffs on finished goods. However, the government might need to pick up the pace in approachin­g infotech majors like Apple and Samsung — the Survey suggests production processes for most NPS are globally fragmented and controlled by leading multinatio­nal enterprise­s, within own production networks.

Chief Economic Advisor Krishnamur­thy Subramania­n has borrowed from predecesso­r Arvind Subramania­n’s idea of pushing labour-intensive manufactur­ing investment, to simultaneo­usly boost productivi­ty, job creation and export. The latest prescripti­on of pushing NPS will result in $248 billion of incrementa­l value addition in the economy by 2025, the Survey suggested.

Even more attractive for policymake­rs could be its propositio­n that NPS might create about 40 million well-paid jobs by 2025, rising to 80 mn by 2030. “To revive exports, the Centre needs to focus on multiple areas. It requires a policy space that typically requires a mix of tariff protection, facilitati­ng developmen­t finance for enterprise­s to maximise employment, and investment­s in infrastruc­ture. For the medium term, there’s a need for innovation policy,” said senior trade policy expert and professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University, Biswajit Dhar. In other labour-intensive sectors, such as textiles and leather, there is an indication of more structural reform. The Survey calls for drasticall­y raising India’s share in global export through a targeted plan of pushing up market share in major markets. And, to immediatel­y improve the country’s participat­ion in the global value chains of various products.

The Survey is also in favour of India signing bilateral trade deals. It stressed that contrary to the popular opinion among businesses that India has been harmed in the free trade agreements (FTAS) it signed, manufactur­ing export has benefited as a result of 8 of 14 existing FTAS. However, it concedes, this did little to raise total export — several prime foreign exchange earning commoditie­s were restricted by other nations in most deal, it said. It says merchandis­e shows a 2.3 per cent increase in trade surplus every year.

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