Mint Hyderabad

Government may trim PLI schemes with little progress

- Rhik.kundu@livemint.com

five years starting 2022.

The scheme provides for an incentive of 4-6% to manufactur­ers on incrementa­l sales of products manufactur­ed in India over a five-year period.

The idea behind the incentive scheme was to attract investment­s in manufactur­ing capacity, especially from foreign companies, and cuttingedg­e technology across these sectors, ensure efficiency, and bring economies of size and scale to make Indian manufactur­ing companies globally competitiv­e.

The 14 sectors covered in the scheme were mobile manufactur­ing and specified electronic components; critical key starting materials/drug intermedia­ries and active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s; manufactur­ing of medical devices; automobile­s and auto components; pharmaceut­icals drugs; speciality steel; telecom and networking products; electronic/technology products; white goods (ACs and LEDs); food products; textile products: MMF segment and technical textiles; high-efficiency solar PV modules; advanced chemistry cell (ACC) battery; and drones and drone components.

“Competitiv­eness is all about taking advantage of the economy of scale. However, my reading is that the capacities have been fragmented, with too many companies under certain sectors,” said Biswajit Dhar, professor at the Centre for Economic Studies and Planning, Jawaharlal Nehru University.

“In sectors like pharma, which have been traditiona­lly strong in exports, the main aim —to reduce dependence on

Chinese APIs (active pharma- ceutical ingredient­s)—hasn’t really worked out,” he added.

So far, businesses have pledged about ₹1.07 trillion of investment­s under the PLI scheme to scale up domestic manufactur­ing, helping create job opportunit­ies for over 700,000 people, according to the commerce ministry. The scheme is estimated to have attracted investment­s of ₹1.03 trillion so far.

Finance and corporate affairs minister Nirmala Sitharaman said in February that the PLI scheme has led to ₹3.4 trillion in exports and ₹8.7 trillion in production and sales, and 176 small businesses have been selected as direct beneficiar­ies of the scheme.

According to industry estimates, while the Centre was hoping to see investment­s worth ₹49,682 crore in FY24 across sectors under the PLI scheme, the first nine months of the fiscal saw just over ₹30,695 crore (61.8% of the target) investment­s come in.

Economist Sanjeev Sanyal, a member of the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council (PM-EAC), recently told Mint that the purpose of the

PLI scheme is to get Indian companies to scale up rapidly.

“One of the major problems Indian manufactur­ing had, historical­ly, was that it was always sub-scale. This meant that we couldn’t take advantage of big economies of scale and compete internatio­nally,” he said.

“The purpose of the PLI scheme is to allow India to get around its midget problem, which we had written about in the economic survey a few years ago,” he added.

As things stand, the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), under the ministry of commerce and industry, has undertaken a third-party assessment of the PLI scheme in white goods (AC and LED lights) with the study being commission­ed to the Arun Jaitley National Institute of Financial Management (AJNIFM).

The PLI scheme is expected to drive industrial capital expenditur­e (capex) of ₹3-3.5 trillion over its duration, rating agency CRISIL said in a recent report. “It will constitute 8-10% of total capex in key industrial sectors over the next 3-4 years. The scheme will also offer incentives amounting to ₹1.8-1.9 lakh crore (trillion) and generate incrementa­l revenue of about ₹30 lakh crore (trillion) over its lifespan,” it added.

The PLI scheme is expected to drive industrial capital expenditur­e of ₹3-3.5 trillion over its duration

 ?? AFP ?? The idea behind the incentive scheme was to attract investment­s in manufactur­ing capacity.
AFP The idea behind the incentive scheme was to attract investment­s in manufactur­ing capacity.

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