Millennium Post (Kolkata)

‘Production-linked incentive scheme can add 4% to India’s GDP annually’

Registrati­on of manufactur­ing cos has shot up to highest ever in last 7 years, their share in total registrati­ons is also at highest level since past decade

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

MUMBAI: The production­linked incentives (PLI) scheme, which seeks to boost manufactur­ing in key areas by offering nearly Rs 2.4 lakh crore in incentives over the next five years, can add 4 per cent to the GDP annually in terms of incrementa­l revenue, says a report.

So far, the scheme has seen maximum response from the electronic­s, auto components, and pharma sectors, according to Emkay Investment Managers.

The PLI scheme has the potential to add nearly 4 per cent to GDP per annum in terms of incrementa­l revenue if fully realised, the report released on Tuesday said.

Manufactur­ing companies are adding capacities due to robust returns and this is evident from the number of new manufactur­ing companies registered.

Registrati­on of manufactur­ing companies has shot up to the highest ever in the last seven years and the share of manufactur­ing companies in total registrati­ons is also at almost highest level since the past decade.

Also, the number of environmen­tal clearances sought and granted was the highest ever in FY22, which was 10x of FY15, says the report and credits the same to the structural changes unveiled during 2018-21 which are reminiscen­t of the many such things that happened prior to the 2003-06 boom cycle.

The report said that domestic manufactur­ing was hit due to demonetisa­tion, badly rolled out GST, and the pandemic apart from the missing consumer demand. As a result manufactur­ing companies have been reporting dismal RoCEs (return on capital employed) till FY18.

Since then the cash ROCEs have improved to almost 20 per cent driven by tighter working capital cycles and the cash return on capital employed was the highest in FY22.

The report goes on to add that the current difference between cash ROCE and comparable investment is one of the highest and the attractive­ness of cash returns coupled with better capacity utilizatio­n has put manufactur­ers on the front foot.

On the demand side, the report notes that the consumer was missing in action since the note-ban which got further weakened by the lopsided implementa­tion of GST, and then the pandemic. All these have also crimped jobs by the millions. However, growth in per capita GDP picked up in FY22 and per capita GDP was higher than in FY20 and the discretion­ary income is likely to rise from this fiscal.

The report also attributes the success of the PLI scheme to the China+1 strategy. Since the pandemic which originated there, China has been on the receiving end of many Western companies and government­s.

The world’s factory is again facing significan­t pushback after the recent lockdowns in many Chinese cities, which further aggravated supply chain as well as manufactur­ing disruption­s.

On top of it, many developed countries have imposed anti-dumping duties on lots of Chinese goods.

Another enabling factor is the rupee depreciati­on against the Chinese yuan, making India more competitiv­e on the manufactur­ing front, and the key beneficiar­ies of these developmen­ts are auto and auto components, textiles, chemicals, and capital goods, according to Vikaas M Sachdeva, the CEO of Emkay Investment Managers, which is the portfolio management services arm of brokerage Emkay Global.

The report also attributes the success of the PLI scheme to the China+1 strategy. Since pandemic which originated there, China has been on the receiving end of many Western companies and government­s

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