Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

National logistics policy to streamline rules, lower costs

- Tanya Thomas tanya.t@livemint.com

MUMBAI: The upcoming national logistics policy is expected to streamline rules and address supply-side constraint­s, leading to lower logistics costs and greater competitiv­eness for Indian products worldwide.

In her Union budget speech on Saturday, finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman said the government will release the policy soon. “The national logistics policy will clarify the roles of the Union government, state government­s and key regulators. It will create a single-window e-logistics market and focus on the generation of employment, skills and making medium and small enterprise­s competitiv­e.”

India’s logistics sector has remained fragmented and unregulate­d, despite its centrality to economic growth. According to a logistics policy draft released by the commerce ministry in February 2019, the government will create a single point of reference for all logistics and trade facilitati­on matters, reducing logistics costs, which are now estimated at 13-14% of GDP, to 10%.

The draft policy has sought to optimise the modal mix (road-60%, rail-31%, water-9%) to global benchmarks (road-25-30%, rail-50-55%, water-20-25%) and promote the developmen­t of multi-modal infrastruc­ture. The policy also recommends setting up a Logistics Wing that will be “the nodal agency tasked to identify key projects for driving first mile and last mile connectivi­ty and to optimize the modal mix to identify commodity and the corridor for the most cost-effective mode of transport.”

Almost 25-30% of fruits and vegetables produced in India are wasted due to lack of cold chain infrastruc­ture. According to the draft policy, the Logistics Wing will “work with the ministries of food processing industries, consumer affairs, food & public distributi­on and the department of horticultu­re in respective states to identify key policy interventi­ons and infrastruc­ture enhancemen­t to promote penetratio­n of cold chain facilities and adoption of reefer (refrigerat­or) trucks in strategic locations.”

“The announceme­nt of the proposed logistics policy is welcome as it is likely to delineate the roles of the regulatory agencies at the central and state government level and address issues around predictabi­lity of regulation­s, registrati­on of services providers, regulation of multi-modal transport and performanc­e standards for service delivery,” Arindam Guha, lead, government and public services, Deloitte India, said. “Many countries, including South Korea and Singapore, came up with this kind of policy in the early 2000s. It covers the different types of logistics service providers. For example, some are just in freight forwarding, others in trucking, some act as full thirdparty logistics providers. Typically, a policy will categorise each of these services and give minimum threshold requiremen­ts for entering the market. For a truck fleet operator, this could be about minimum fleet size, specificat­ions of trucks, axle load and carrying capacity etc.,” he said.

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The national logistics policy will create a single-window e-logistics market and focus on the generation of employment.
BLOOMBERG ■ The national logistics policy will create a single-window e-logistics market and focus on the generation of employment.

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