Law ministry clears scrapping time limit to report child rape
State intervention can help raise our share in global value chains
NEW DELHI: The ministry of law and justice has ratified the proposal of the women and child development ministry to remove the clause of age limit for reporting cases of child sexual abuse, WCD minister Maneka Gandhi said.
The WCD ministry had consulted the law ministry in view of the overriding provisions of the POCSO Act over other laws and provisions of mandatory reporting of such offences.
“Often, children are unable to report such crimes as the perpetrator in most cases is either a family member, a relative or closely known person.
Studies have also shown that the child continues to carry the trauma of sexual abuse till very late in life.
In order to overcome this trauma, many grown-up people have started coming out to report the abuse faced by them as children,” the ministry noted in a statement.
For India to solve its employment challenge, it needs a big push in manufacturing. This is why the fate of the Make in India initiative is crucial. A study by the ministry of commerce shows that some of the success stories of Make in India could be more optics than concrete gains. Here’s one such example. India’s import of mobile phones from
China came down from $6.3 billion to
$3.3 billion between 2014 and 2017. But the import of telecom parts from China increased from $1.3 billion to $9.4 billion during this period.
These statistics capture the harsh reality of manufacturing in the world of globalised supply chains. Large manufacturers strategically spread their production across the globe to maximise their profits at each stage of production. These decisions could be driven by better availability of cheap and skilled work force in a given sector, spill-over of technological knowledge from similar industries working in that country or significant promises of benefits by the host government. While some of these issues are structural in nature and can only be improved in the medium to long term, it is important to understand that a manufacturing take-off and challenges such as improving skill sets and technological knowledge in an economy are a bit like the chicken and egg problem. A big mobile company might not want to bring all its manufacturing activity in a country due to lack of skilled workforce. Workers there will not become experts in making state of the art mobile phones by studying at a polytechnic.
In an age where big companies go venue shopping to set up factories, increasing a country’s share in global value chains cannot be achieved without active state intervention. This needs to be done both at the micro level, such a focusing on a particular cluster or industry, and the macro level, which basically means acknowledging the fact that we need an industrial policy.