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Terming Modi's effort to rival China difficult and slim, FT cites closure of Nokia plant in Chennai as example

By A Representative
In an year-end commentary, premier British business daily, โ€œFinancial Timesโ€, has termed prime minister Narendra Modi's dream to redouble โ€œIndiaโ€™s efforts to rival China by turning into a global manufacturing hubโ€ as โ€œimportant to his countryโ€™s futureโ€ but insists, it is โ€œdifficult to achieveโ€. Written by James Crabtree in the column โ€œInside Businessโ€ and titled โ€œModi faces uphill battle in mission to see India rival Chinaโ€, the commentary arrives at this conclusion by saying that โ€œIndiaโ€™s manufacturing frailty is well documented.โ€
โ€œAt just 15 per cent of gross domestic product, the sector is less than half the size of Chinaโ€™sโ€, the daily points out. Saying that โ€œno poor Asian country has risen to middle-income status with such feeble figuresโ€, the daily gives this as the main reason why Modi's Make in India drive to reach the pinnacle of Chinese-style exporting powerhouse are โ€œslimโ€.
Conceding that India may have excelled in some โ€œhigh-tech manufacturingโ€ and โ€œthe likes of Ford and Hyundai run world-class local factories, packed with whirring robotsโ€, with many global carmakers starting to see India as โ€œa crucial export baseโ€, the daily insists, โ€œBut lower skilled, labour-intensive industries such as clothes manufacturing and electronics do less well, causing alarm in a nation that must create 12 million new jobs a year until 2030 to meet a looming demographic bulge.โ€
Giving the example of now Nokia plant collapsed in India to prove its point, the daily says, โ€œUntil last year, the Finnish technology group ran a large, ultra-modern factory in Chennai, employing about 8,000 workers and exporting products globally. A local supply chain built up around the plant, attracting the likes of Chinese smartphone maker Foxconn. But this was before Indiaโ€™s revenue authorities took an interest. Two disputed tax claims scuppered plans to transfer the factory to Microsoft as part of a global deal. Now it is set to be sold or closed, imperilling workers and suppliers alike.โ€
โ€œWorseโ€, the daily says, โ€œOther phonemakers seem unlikely to follow where Nokia failed. Despite rocketing domestic demand, local players such as Micromax rely almost exclusively on Chinese suppliers. Chinaโ€™s Xiaomi plans a research lab in Bangalore as it attempts to grow in India, but no local production until at least 2016. As India seeks manufacturing success, labour-intensive products such as mobile phones should be an ideal fit. Instead, industry groups warn phone exports may drop to zero next year.โ€
Pointing out that โ€œreversing such trends will be difficult, making the limited progress by Modiโ€™s otherwise laudable Make in India drive all the more depressingโ€, the daily says, The phrase is often repeated by fawning industrialists, but has prompted scant policy changes.โ€ It quotes Arun Shourie, journalist-turned-BJP politician to prove its point: โ€œWhen all is said and done, more is said than done.โ€
The top daily takes issue with well-known pro-Modi economist Arvind Panagariya of the Columbia University, who believes that export-led manufacturing remains Indiaโ€™s best economic hope, saying, Panagariya's view that Make in India campaign only need for far-reaching reforms, such as scrapping outmoded labour and land acquisition laws, may not be easy to achieve, terming them โ€œimprobableโ€.
โ€œWorseโ€, it underlines, โ€œThe nature of Asian manufacturing is changing in ways that make Indiaโ€™s task trickier. Cheap labour is still an advantage. But factors such as logistics and energy costs are increasingly important in persuading global companies to relocate โ€” both areas where India struggles. Even manufacturers facing rising wage bills in China show few signs of moving to India en masse.โ€
Qouting Reserve Bank of India governor Rathuram Rajan who said that โ€œthe world as a whole is unlikely to be able to accommodate another export-led China,โ€ warning against โ€œsneaking in tariffs for favoured sectors under the cloak of pro-manufacturing rhetoricโ€, the daily says, โ€œIndia ranks second only to Indonesia in a recent analysis of manufacturing costs across 25 large exporters by consultants BCG. Perversely, the countryโ€™s myriad manufacturing barriers should make it possible to remove at least some of those expenses, including the overzealous tax regime that damaged Nokia.โ€

Comments

Anonymous saidโ€ฆ
Nokia is loosing its market world over and being a non indian company preferred its base location and other cheaper location to run its business, so it can not be termed as collapse of hopes. Local mobile market is thriving in the country with emergence of micromax and similar brands. Things are reviving and there is a lot of hope.

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