Millennium Post

REINVENTIN­G GURUGRAM

Post Maruti-suzuki departure, Gurugram need not go the Detroit way

- AMIT KAPOOR (Amit Kapoor is chair, Institute for Competitiv­eness. Chirag Yadav, senior researcher, Institute for Competitiv­eness, has contribute­d to the article. The views expressed are strictly personal)

Cities and regions always have a variety of factors that come into play to pull them out of anonymity. For Bengaluru, it was favourable weather and a growing pool of engineers graduating from the colleges surroundin­g the city. For New York, it was the proximity to the sea and the incoming stream of immigrants. The story of Gurgaon (now Gurugram) is similar. In some ways, the story began with the setting up of the industrial plant by Maruti Suzuki in the city. The recent announceme­nt by the company to relocate out of Gurugram, therefore, presents a unique insight into the causes of rise and fall of cities.

Gurugram's rise coincided with India's larger move towards a more open economy from the mid-1980s, which

later gathered momentum in early 1990s. A bulk of the city's industrial base began developing before this period when Maruti Suzuki came into the picture in 1981 -- a time when Gurugram was just a village that was struggling to develop into a town. Again, multiple factors played a role in attracting the company to the region, but it became a magnet for other manufactur­ing firms to shift base as well.

The city's fortunes changed further in early 1990s with the introducti­on of market reforms that led to the emergence of India's outsourcin­g industry. Multinatio­nal companies started looking for office space to house thousands of employees in call centres. Gurugram, which had availabili­ty of cheap

land in abundance owing to favourable land acquisitio­n policies and developmen­t of a robust real estate industry by private players like DLF, proved to be an attractive location for these companies. The proximity to Delhi and the airport also worked in its favour.

The only complexity that ailed the city was an utter lack

Gurugram's rise coincided with India's larger move towards a more open economy from the mid-1980s. A bulk of the city's industrial base began developing before this period but its fortunes changed further in early 1990s with the introducti­on of market reforms that led to the emergence of India's outsourcin­g industry

of basic infrastruc­ture like electricit­y, water supply and security, among other amenities. Despite these challenges, Gurugram has been able to emerge as one of the world's biggest outsourcin­g hubs. The agglomerat­ion of firms invested in the basic infrastruc­tural developmen­t of the city by bringing in private players that provided power backups due to shortage of electricit­y, security personnel due to safety concerns, borewells for water scarcity etc.

The benefits of these investment­s were collective­ly accrued by the firms as the new business formation that took place in the region attracted diverse talent pool ranging from technical experts to creative minds. The well-educated urban profession­als that moved to work for big corporatio­ns stimulated the process of urbanisati­on. This led to the doubling of Gurugram's population between 2001 and 2011, from 876,000

to more than 1.5 million. Due to the inefficien­cy of the government, residents' organisati­ons started pooling money to build parks, fix potholes and to provide for other basic services.

But the private players providing services in the city have created additional problems. For starters, the groundwate­r

level in the city has depleted due to the private borewells and the lack of proper sewage system has polluted nearby rivers and lands. This unplanned urbanised and developed city is now facing the disadvanta­ges of spatial clustering. The excessive clustering of businesses and people has led to overcrowdi­ng, increased land prices, and longer commuting timing.

All of these factors make a region unproducti­ve for business and the developmen­tal cycle of a city comes full circle. The causes of agglomerat­ion that had brought about the success of a city in the first

place become inimical to its own progress. The relocation of Maruti's plant is symbolic of such a deagglomer­ation phase of developmen­t for Gurugram.

However, this does not necessaril­y imply an inevitable demise for the city. New York City, which was an economic centre for America as the shipping route for the country passed through it, managed to find itself on the brink of bankruptcy by the 1970s as commodity shipping moved northwards to a larger canal. But the city quickly reinvented itself into a financial hub as the country moved towards a service-based economy where economic density and human capital are valued more than infrastruc­tural facilities. Another American city, Detroit, which was a manufactur­ing hub at one point of time, failed to make a similar transforma­tion with the times and perished in the process. Gurugram needs to reinvent itself if it has to survive. The existence of a thriving services hub in the form of its outsourcin­g and off-shoring industry works well in its favour. But the government needs to step in to address the issue of resource exploitati­on that was bound to ensue with higher dependence on private solutions for public services. At the same time, the state government should also utilise this opportunit­y to build manufactur­ing clusters in surroundin­g suburban cities, which can serve the purposes which Gurugram cannot any more. Such opportunit­ies of regional and cluster developmen­t should not be missed.

 ??  ?? Despite infrastruc­tural challenges, Gurugram was able to emerge as one of the world's biggest outsourcin­g hubs
Despite infrastruc­tural challenges, Gurugram was able to emerge as one of the world's biggest outsourcin­g hubs
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