Business Standard

INDIA’S TOY STORY NEEDS GOVT STRONGLY BACKING THE GAME

80% toys still imported, mostly from China; local industry suffers from lack of scale and innovation

- SINDHU BHATTACHAR­YA

At the mega toy fair in February this year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke of two ancient Indian board games, chess and ludo, to emphasise the rich legacy of the country’s toy industry. And now again he’s made a case for innovation in this industry to boost exports and improve India’s position in “Toyconomy”, as he called it, saying our share in the $100-billion global toy market is currently a mere 1.5 per cent.

Market research agency IMARC echoes Modi when it says that in India, toys date back 5000 years to the Indus Valley Civilisati­on. The earliest ones included whistles shaped like birds, toy monkeys that could slide down a string and small carts made from materials found in nature such as sticks, clay and rocks.

While there might be no disputing India’s rich toy-making tradition, the industry is languishin­g for lack of investment and technology, and also owing to competitio­n from cheap imports. And though it has been listed among 24 key sectors under the government’s Atmanirbha­r Bharat Abhiyaan, the question remains: will this push help place it in the global game?

Currently, 80-odd per cent of the toys sold in India are imported — nearly 60 per cent of them from China. The local toy industry is fragmented, with 85 per cent falling in the “micro” category of the micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMES) where investment in plant and machinery does not exceeding ~25 lakh. The industry suffers from both lack of scale and innovation.

Ajay Aggarwal, president of the Toy Associatio­n of India (TAI), says the local market remains flooded with cheap Chinese imports since China supports its manufactur­ers. “In India, toy parts are mostly made by hand in factories spread over just 200-250 metres and employing 15-20 workers,” he says. “We are happy the government has taken it up as a focus area and is planning a slew of incentives.”

A distributo­r for Funskool, the biggest homegrown toy brand, points out that while cheap and low-quality imports have indeed been the industry’s bane, local manufactur­ers, too, have shown scant regard for quality. Funskool accounts for 8-12 per cent share of India’s toy market and exports toys to several countries including the US and UK. It obtained BIS certificat­ion for its products last year and from January 2021, this certificat­ion has been made mandatory for all toys. This single decision of the government has impacted local manufactur­ers as well as importers. The former find the certificat­ion process cumbersome and expensive, while the latter are unable to get their factories across the globe certified amid a raging pandemic.

Harsh Khattar, a distributo­r of California headquarte­red Matt el toys, welcomes the mandatory certificat­ion even if it has impacted the brand’s business in India. “Its long-term impact will be good because there is now emphasis on quality. This could also improve the selling price of toys,” he says, adding, “But in the short term, it is difficult for the industry as imports are getting stalled. We used to stock 500-600 SKUS (stock-keeping units) earlier, but are now working with just 40-50 SKUS”.

As tighter quality norms bring about a shift in the industry dynamics, Jaimin Shah, MD of Bharat Balloons, says the government should also facilitate technology transfer and control the steep rise in raw material prices. His company is the second largest maker of balloons in India, the prime raw material for which is latex rubber. Shah says latex prices have risen by up to 30 per cent during the second wave of Covid-19, while plastic, the other key raw material, has seen a jump of almost 50 per cent in prices since last year. “We need to promote FTAS (free trade agreements) with at least the Saarc nations so that import of raw materials and export of finished products become dutyfree,” he says.

Jimmy Joy of Jovin Kidzz Enterprise­s in Thrissur manufactur­es baby tricycles, cradles, walkers and other physical toys in two factories (in Kerala and Delhi) and sells them in Tamil Nadu and Kerala. He would like to explore exports but lack of clarity over business prospects in unknown markets is holding him back.

A key industry demand, says Aggarwal of TAI, is the creation of a Toy Promotion Board that can guide and look into problems of both manufactur­ers and exporters. As of now, the toy industry is clubbed with the sports goods industry and issues, if any, must be taken to the Sports Goods Export Promotion Council. Currently, toy exports account for just about ~1,000 crore turnover.

Manufactur­ers and traders also want the government to create specialise­d toy hubs — like the toy park it promised to set up near Jewar in Uttar Pradesh but hasn’t yet, says Sanjiv Mehra, president of Delhi’s Khan Market Traders’ Associatio­n and owner of Allied Stores, a toy shop. Mehra also wants the government to impose punitive duties on import of toys and encourage large global brands such as Hasbro, Mattel and Lego to manufactur­e in India.

TAI’S demand includes land for toy manufactur­ing under the plug-and-play mode, where the government leases out land parcels instead of manufactur­ers having to buy expensive real estate. This will free up working capital for the micro and small players.

There is much appreciati­on for the way the Vietnam government, for example, has handheld its toy industry. Aggarwal says, “In fiveseven years, the toy industry turnover in Vietnam has grown by 1,000 times because the government signed FTAS where exports to the US and Europe became tax free.”

India’s toy story, too, needs such a strong plot. The National Toy Action Plan, prepared by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade, could be the opening chapter.

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