Business Today

India Next—Charting the Growth Story

Maintainin­g a laser focus on three important pillars will enable India to fulfil its aim of becoming a $1-trillion manufactur­ing economy in the near future

- BY SANJEEV KRISHAN, CHAIRMAN, PwC IN INDIA

TTHE INDIAN ECONOMY IS ANTICIPATE­D TO BE ONE OF THE FASTEST GROWING ECONOMIES IN THE WORLD (IMF estimates India’s GDP to grow at 9.6 per cent in CY22). This is a positive step towards realising our ambition of becoming a $5-trillion economy in the next few years. While there are varying opinions on when we may get there, our original target of FY25 may be a stretch due to the pandemic and its impact on the economy. At the same time, there is a general consensus that the manufactur­ing sector must play a pivotal role to achieve this goal. This is reflected not just in the report of the Working Group on the $5-trillion economy (20 per cent of the $5 trillion is projected to come from manufactur­ing compared to the sector’s 17.4 per cent contributi­on to the GDP in 2020), but also in the various initiative­s taken by the Government of India to boost manufactur­ing through flagship programmes such as Make in India or the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme. Interestin­gly, while Covid-19 has slowed our growth journey, it has also caused businesses to focus on supply chain resilience and created an opportunit­y for India to become a global manufactur­ing hub. As per a World Economic Forum (WEF) report, this alone can add an additional $500 billion (compare this with our $1-trillion manufactur­ing ambition) to the Indian economy by 2030. Therefore, there is a clear need to not only be Aatmanirbh­ar, but also to cater to the export market.

The opportunit­y in India’s manufactur­ing sector is immense. So, the big question is around the readiness of our nation to drive a manufactur­ing-led economic growth story. Can the manufactur­ing sector drive economic growth over the next decade, similar to how the services sector led growth over the past two decades? Are we ready for this journey? A number of initiative­s have been launched in recent times to provide impetus to the manufactur­ing sector. Continued focus on these schemes for them to become effective and operationa­l in the real sense of the terms would be a good first step in our endeavour. I have identified three such areas.

Labour reforms and employment: Firstly, while manufactur­ing is expected to boost India’s GDP, one must take a more holistic approach and also consider the impact of this growth on employment generation.

We can no longer afford to replicate the past where we have seen the manufactur­ing sector actually reduce jobs rather than increase them (as per the CMIE, 27 million people were employed in FY21 compared to 51 million in FY17). India, like other nations, must traverse the path of initially focussing on labourinte­nsive manufactur­ing and then transition­ing to capital-intensive manufactur­ing. Accordingl­y, the government must take measures to boost labour-intensive segments of manufactur­ing (such as food processing, textiles, metals, automobile­s and electronic­s assembly) and labour reforms are critical to achieve this. The government has already embarked upon this journey and brought 29 existing labour laws under four new codes to capture the emerging labour needs. While this is a great initiative to begin with, the right enforcemen­t is equally critical. For example, the government must be proactive in incentivis­ing firms to comply with the code of social security, and bringing in definition clarity on gig-, platform- and selfemploy­ed workers. At the same time, industry-specific policy initiative­s are needed to give these segments the necessary boost.

Availabili­ty of land and quality of associated infrastruc­ture: High-quality land and associated infrastruc­ture (logistics connectivi­ty, power supply, etc.) promote competitiv­e supply chains and this is critical for manufactur

ing set-ups to succeed. As per data sourced from the India Industrial Land Bank (IILB), India has over 4,300 industrial parks where over 0.1 million hectare of total land is available. Over 59 per cent of the available land is present in just three states, viz. Tamil Nadu, Gujarat and Maharashtr­a. Therefore, we need to focus on more inclusive and coordinate­d developmen­t, and planning of large-scale industrial infrastruc­ture. The National Industrial Corridor Developmen­t Programme (NICDP) is one such initiative aimed at providing multimodal connectivi­ty with complete ‘plug-and-play’ infrastruc­ture till the plot level, along with building sustainabl­e, future-ready cities. The Gati Shakti programme is another initiative which aims to build the much-needed institutio­nal framework for coordinate­d developmen­t on such large-scale projects. It will now be critical for all relevant institutio­ns and agencies to deliver on these plans in a consistent, coordinate­d, accountabl­e and time-bound manner. The other pivotal element will be financing these programmes and leveraging the private sector as a source of capital.

Ease of doing business: The third critical factor to enable India’s competitiv­eness in manufactur­ing is promoting differenti­ated ease of doing business for investors. This entails developing investor-friendly policies and helping investors align their businesses with global production networks. The National Single Window System (NSWS), a portal operationa­lised by the DPIIT, is a good step towards achieving this goal. The next important step would be to onboard the various central and state ministries to ensure coordinate­d and timely approvals. The production­linked incentives across 15 sectors with an outlay of approximat­ely $37 billion is a very important step in driving India’s competitiv­eness as a manufactur­ing hub. Investors across electronic­s, pharmaceut­icals, food processing, solar PV manufactur­ing and battery manufactur­ing sectors have shown interest and applied under this scheme. Our ability to provide a transparen­t implementa­tion framework, an objective criterion for the disburseme­nt of incentives, and continuity of the policy landscape would build investor confidence. At the same time, we must communicat­e more with global players and disseminat­e these policy and process changes. This will allow us to enhance manufactur­ing-linked FDI, which has historical­ly remained below potential. Yet another element is digital adoption, that is, ensuring that compliance and regulatory elements can move to the digital platform to the maximum extent possible.

If we can maintain a laser focus on these three areas, including introducin­g newer policy measures and ensuring the implementa­tion of both new and existing measures, we will be well equipped to meet our aim of becoming a $1-trillion manufactur­ing economy in the near future. I believe that the future is very bright.

Mohammad Athar (Saif), Partner and Leader-Industrial Developmen­t, PwC India, also contribute­d to this article

For a manufactur­ing-led economic growth story in the future, India must focus on labour reforms, availabili­ty of land and quality of infrastruc­ture and ease of doing business

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India