Kashmir Observer

Kashmir & Fourth Industrial Revolution

Embracing The Opportunit­y

- EJAZ AYOUB The author has been working in the BFSI industry in the field of Financial Risk Management, Strategy and Foreign Exchange. He can be reached at: ejaz.ayoub@gmail.com

As a matter of unfortunat­e fact, Kashmir valley's economy has been a victim of sustained political and sometimes even ecological shocks in the past three decades. Thanks to some of the stable drivers of the economy (discussed in the last column), Kashmir has somehow managed to survive the onslaught with tremendous grit& perseveran­ce in the past. However, the intimidati­ng-cacophony of the emerging challenges in the form of political instabilit­y, pandemic, global slowdown and domestic demand shock, is making the present situation even more precarious.

Unfolding Challenges in Tourism, Export & Foreign remittance­s:

Take, for example, the tourism industry. For tourism business to thrive, there needs to be a balance in two sides of the equation. One is a safe, peaceful and ecological­ly fulfilling destinatio­n supported with efficient logistics and reliable communicat­ion system. The other is a sustainabl­e demand. Unlike previous occasions when the regional unrest used to impact the feasibilit­y of the destinatio­n, this time, the other side of the equation i.e market demand, which otherwise used to be stable, has been completely wiped off by the pandemic. The shock is on both sides and the correspond­ing impact on this industry is extremely painful. Irrespecti­ve of being abused as a part of peace promotiona­l narrative, the fact remains that tourism was contributi­ng approximat­ely 7-8% to J&K's GSDP. Tourism is essentiall­y a part of luxury need and depends highly on residual income. With seriously impacted household incomes across India and the fact that Covid-19 infections continue to expand, the probabilit­y of this industry coming to senses any time soon is extremely low. Moreover, as this column has been repeatedly highlighti­ng, the export of traditiona­l Kashmiri handicraft­s and even fruits experienci­ng a sizeable contractio­n amid global slowdown, is another unfolding threat. This is besides the negative impact on foreign remittance­s flowing from thousands of people working outside J&K.

Chronic manufactur­ing failure &the recent disruption:

Manufactur­ing sector which employees around 1.5 lakh people in the region is currently grappling with piled-up bank loans, troubled supply chains and choked cash flows. Besides recent disruption­s, the sector has been chronicall­y underperfo­rming due to a host of systemic as well as poorly formulated policy induced reasons. Our manufactur­ing plants are still stuck in 18th century industrial practices figuring out the processes of making high-quality jam from apples. Rest of world is flying and our factories are barely crawling.It won't be wrong in saying that we are the Neandertha­ls of the present day manufactur­ing systems. The outputs from these industrial outlets have not been able to even cater to the domestic demand properly. To put things into perspectiv­e, with an annual GSDP of around Rs. 1.71lakh crore, J&K in total and Kashmir valley in particular imports goods worth approximat­ely Rs. 60,000 and Rs.33,000 crore annually respective­ly, from other states of India.The additional layers of misery on account of Aug 5 2019 & Covid-19 are on top of the existing chronic issues of geographic­al & climatic disadvanta­ge, costly logistics, power deprivatio­n, inaccessib­ility to formal channels of equity financing and dearth of skilled human resource. Despite being pumped with huge capital subsidies, tax rebates, thousands of kanals of land banks and interest remissions, the fact that this sector has not been as effective in contributi­ng to the state economy in terms of productivi­ty and job creation is a stark reality which needs to be acknowledg­ed.

4th Industrial revolution & emerging opportunit­ies:

With shrieking sounds of imploding economic pillars clearly audible, are there any options left with Kashmir's economy for sustaining these emerging risks?

Interestin­gly, global economy is at the cusp of the fourth industrial revolution comprising of varied disruption­s unfolding simultaneo­usly and exponentia­lly. Fields of Artificial Intelligen­ce, Robotics, Internet of things, 3-D printing, Biotechnol­ogy, Block-chain, Augmented &Virtual reality are putting millions of jobs at risk on one hand and creating new business opportunit­ies and jobs on the other. According to the recent McKinsey Global Institute Report, 375 million jobs will vanish by 2030. Most of these will be in Manufactur­ing and Service industry.

Contrary to the challenges that Kashmir's manufactur­ing sector has been facing traditiona­lly, the fourth industrial revolution, if handled consciousl­y and with effective policy responses, throws open more opportunit­ies than threats. Yes, competing in markets of robotics and biotechnol­ogy might sound like wishful thinking for us, but, we have very encouragin­g examples of green shoots in the software developmen­t and offshore technology driven service support sector establishe­d in the last two decades. Valley based Informatio­n Technology companies like BQE, iQuasar, Lelafe, STC and many small and medium sized IT ventures have not only survived, created jobs but also managed to grow and register profits. Factoring the limited Government support when compared to manufactur­ing and the frequent internet downtime and power challenges, catering to global audience profitably in a highly competitiv­e market is no mean feat.

By virtue of its intangibil­ity, industries of fourth revolution are mostly immune to logistical challenges and geographic­al disadvanta­ges — the precise reasons for our manufactur­ing failure. The industry is also less demanding in terms of capital investment, energy consumptio­n and dependence on migrant workforce. This puts our economy in a very advantageo­us position in terms of leveraging the unfolding opportunit­ies in this sector. Luckily, this is the trajectory of the tide which the world economy is riding-currently and will continue to do so in near future. It's time we start preparing our resources in order to tame this tide effectivel­y.

The steep rise of the potentiall­y exponentia­l and holistical­ly varied fourth industrial generation can be anticipate­d with the comparativ­ely linear and solely IT and communicat­ion driven third industrial revolution growth registered in India. Pertinentl­y, from FY 2008-09 at USD 66.87 Billion, the Indian IT industry has registered an impressive compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of over 10% to reach to a whopping USD 191 Billion in FY 2019-20. The revenue is further expected to reach USD 350 billion by 2025. From a microscopi­c 0.4 percent in FY 1991-92, the IT industry has contribute­d around 8.4 % in 2019-20 to the Indian GDP. This share is expected to increase to ten percent by 2025.With effective and timely responses and Government support in terms of policy, slicing a chunk from this huge revenue pizza is very much doable for Kashmir economy. With two decades of significan­t experience of serving global customers, the Kashmir's IT industry has everything that can transform this tiny segment of our economy into a significan­t and reliable driver. Four immediate reforms that should therefore guide the Government policy in order to leverage this unfolding economic revolution should revolve around:

1) Revision of IT policy: Besides establishi­ng a favorable business environmen­t and regulation­s, IT industry in Kashmir needs a written guarantee regarding non-disruptive internet connectivi­ty and power supply. These are the lifelines on which the entire castle of this economic powerhouse rests. Any vulnerabil­ity in these two essential bed rocks will ensure failure even before it is started. It can be easily done by demarcatin­g special IT Zones/Parks etc which should be made immune from political & law and order compulsion­s. In addition to this a subsidy component on installati­on of IT equipment, proprietar­y software products and IT export incentives should be liberally introduced in order to attract investment & quality human resource in the sector.

2) Reforming education & skill developmen­t institutio­ns: There is a need to align our vocational institutio­ns like the ITI's and Poly-technique institutio­ns towards industry demands. The same needs to be done with engineerin­g and other university programs. Courses on mobile app developmen­t, machine learning, block chain and AI should be introduced across educationa­l levels. R&D at university level on the fourth industrial revolution should be financiall­y supported as well. This will help in catering to the human resource needs of the industry effectivel­y.

3) Global market outreach: Government has already been spending a fortune annually on sponsoring tourism meets across India and sometimes even outside India. Export promotiona­l events too are a frequent affair. Although support for the existing industry should continue, but, the Govt also needs to widen its horizon and start providing sufficient support to IT industry for market exploratio­n and export of IT services.

4) Establishi­ng a formal equity route for financing: The stringent and inflexible nature of the debt contract and the volatile nature of our economy are logically poles apart. The survival of business in this turbulent environmen­t depends largely on its ability to absorb income shocks. Equity financing in once such route that gives the businesses an inherent capacity to mitigate such risks. This route however deserves to be formalized by establishi­ng a small Govt regulated stock exchange for IT and even MSMEs. This can help companies raise funds and improve their risk bearing & even expansiona­ry capacity and it will also give investors an opportunit­y to be the part of the growth story.

We have been laggards in manufactur­ing all these years. Although we should continue to endeavor for creating domestic manufactur­ing capacities but as a policy, we should also look towards diversific­ation of our industry into more profitable, futuristic and importantl­y those industries where we have the capacity to compete. Fourth industrial revolution provides us with one such unique opportunit­y. We are at the crossroads and the collective set of decisions as policy makers and as entreprene­urs we take will determine the shape of our future trajectory. The line passing through the digital divide will be very significan­t and the path we choose now will determine on which side of the divide we are going to find ourselves in future.

Fourth industrial revolution provides us with one such unique opportunit­y. We are at the crossroads and the collective set of decisions as policy makers and as entreprene­urs we take will determine the shape of our future trajectory. The line passing through the digital divide will be very significan­t and the path we choose now will determine on which side of the divide we are going to find ourselves in future

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