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Modi looks inward to save Indian economy

This comes as coronaviru­s crisis bites

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NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Narendra Modi wants to make India more self-reliant, but if the experience over the past few years is anything togo by, it’s not going to be easy.

Faced with disruption­s to raw material supplies from China because of the pandemic and millions of job losses following a nationwide lockdown, Modi has ratcheted up calls to boost local manufactur­ing and reduce India’s reliance on imports.

A shortage of personal protective equipment at the beginning of the outbreak increased his resolve - and within the space of just two months, India has become the world’s biggest maker of PPE kits after China. That success has only emboldened Modi as he exhorts Indians to buy local goods.

A military standoff with China - resulting in the death of 20 Indian soldiers along a contested Himalayan border -- is now adding fuel to those calls. The government is reviewing rules and tariffs on imports from its neighbor, people familiar with the matter said, amid a call from local political leaders for a boycott of everything from China.

Traders, who were previously reluctant to snub cheap Chinese imports, have now come up with a list of 3,000 items, including toys, watches and plastic products, that can easily be replaced by local manufactur­ing.

The push to cut imports this time is “more pronounced in its economic nationalis­m,” said Amitendu Palit, a senior research fellow at the National University of Singapore. “The dominant thinking is if businesses give up imports, and start making the same products at home, then they would create jobs, and generate incomes in a self-sustaining process.” Modi previously attempted to boost domestic manufactur­ing with his Make in

India plan, but that had limited success. Under that initiative, the government pledged to cut red tape and assist companies looking to set up shop in the country. The ambition was to grow the share of manufactur­ing in the economy to 25% by 2020, from 15% in 2014.

But strict local content rules in that plan backfired by raising production costs for companies, while waning domestic consumptio­n amid a protracted slowdown in the economy saw the manufactur­ing sector’s share remaining almost stagnant at about 15%.

Modi has little choice but to focus on manufactur­ing, given the slump in the dominant services sector - the primary driver for employment growth. With the economy on course for its first full-year contractio­n in four decades, authoritie­s see industrial growth as key to creating jobs for some one million young people entering the workforce every month. India has outlined new measures to promote self-reliance, including prohibitin­g global companies from bidding for government contracts up to a value of two billion rupees (Us$26.4mil), and giving collateral-free loans to small businesses that account for about 48% of India’s goods exports.

Analysts say the latest measures will do little to make local firms more competitiv­e.

“These are all medium term strategies India already had. Now it is taking a little bit of political color,” said NR Bhanumurth­y, vice-chancellor of Bengaluru Dr. B.R. Ambedkar School of Economics. “If you want to really deal with China you need to be very competitiv­e. That’s not an overnight job.”

The politicall­y influentia­l Swadeshi Jagran Manch -- a group aligned with Modi’s ruling party - has been at the forefront of pushing Indians to reduce their dependence on imports. But doing so is easier said than done. China is India’s biggest source of imports, with purchases including electronic goods, nuclear reactors and organic chemicals running into almost Us$70bil last year. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Make in India: A shortage of personal protective equipment at the beginning of the outbreak increased Modi’s resolve - and within the space of just two months, India has become the world’s biggest maker of PPE kits after China.
Make in India: A shortage of personal protective equipment at the beginning of the outbreak increased Modi’s resolve - and within the space of just two months, India has become the world’s biggest maker of PPE kits after China.

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