Indian
Industry 1991-2016
The face of Indian industry has changed unrecognisably in
the last 25 years and none can dispute that.
The growth in various sectors of Indian Industry in the last
25 years is phenomenal. Indian IT industry exported about $100 million in 1991
where as in 2016 it exported $ 100 billion that is a 1000 times growth ! Indian
IT companies have become multinationals and are rivaling the biggest and the
best in the world. Car production used to be about 1 lakh cars in 1991 which
has reached nearly 25 lakhs last year and both Indian and foreign companies are
doing their design and development of many new models within India. Today India
has the world's largest producers of two wheelers and tractors. Telecom services
have grown phenomenally and from 25 million landlines it has increased to about
50 million landlines and about a billion mobile phones. ISRO has now launched
over 130 satellites from its own rockets and out of which nearly 50 are foreign
satellites. In the nuclear program both for energy and weapons Indian
scientists and engineers have demonstrated the ability to design and develop not
only natural Uranium based reactors of 220, 540 and 700 MW but also next
generation of reactors like Fast Breeders as well as Thermonuclear weapons and
nuclear submarines. Indian financial sector consisting of Banks, stock markets,
commodity markets etc have all modernised and India has a truly sophisticated
financial sector that has surpassed many developed economies in technological
superiority. India has a large base in petrochemicals, manmade fibres,
plastics, oil refining, pharmaceuticals, urea and agro-chemicals and its
companies in these sectors are respected all over the world for their size and
sophistication. In fact just as India has become the IT services hub for the
world it is also being called the Pharmacy for the world particularly in
generic drugs. It is often said that India missed the bus in electronics, in
fact India imports almost all of its electronics in finished or component form.
However due to new developments in computer applications many of them generated
by Indian engineers in Silicon Valley, like Suhas Patil, Prabhu Goel, Raj
Singh, Prakash Bhalerao, Rajiv Madhavan etc the process of electronic microchip
production has been neatly divided into design & testing and manufacture.
Now many cutting edge chips for the world are being designed and tested in Bengaluru,
Hyderabad, Pune, Gurugram etc while they are manufactured elsewhere in China,
Taiwan, South Korea, US etc. It is to be noted that about 80% of value add in
chip industry occurs at design and testing stage and only 20% at the
fabrication stage.
While Indian industry was in not of global scale in '91,
today in many sectors they are in the top 5 in the world. More over they have
spread their wings globally and own telecom, steel, aluminum, automobiles, Oil
and Gas, coal mines, consumer goods businesses in other parts of the world
including developed economies. They have shown their management skills by
turning around successfully many industries which were sick, closed or not very
profitable in other countries.
This qualitative and quantitative description of change in
Indian industry in the last 25 years can go on and on for which there is not
much space here and we can come back to some specific features later but it is
important to touch briefly on what factors or new phenomena have driven this
qualitative and quantitative growth.
Let us briefly look at what happened in the 25 years before
1991.
Was their growth in the industry in quantity and quality
during 1966-91?
Yes of course. Looking at Steel, Automobiles, IT, Pharma,
Energy, Textiles, Telecom, Space, Nuclear etc there was considerable growth in
both quantity and quality during 1966-91. For example the sophistication of
textile industry increased greatly with the new technologies in weaving,
spinning, processing etc coming in the 80's. When these sophisticated
technologies became accessible to small and medium powerlooms in the 80's most
composite mills in Mumbai, Ahmedabad, Kanpur, Delhi etc closed down and became
real estate companies. There was also the growth of indigenous polyester fibre
production. Similarly while the number of telephones increased to 25 million
the quality of telecom network started changing with the introduction of C-DoTs
digital exchanges and the coming into being of STD facility and the mushrooming
of STD public booths in the late 80's. The hitech and strategic sectors of
nuclear and space too had grown from infancy in the 1960's to considerable
growth by 1991. From small sounding rockets to launching our own satellite
Rohini in our own rocket SLV-3 and from research reactors in Trombay to
designing and operating our own 220 MW pressurised heavy water reactors. Till
recently the largest digital project in the world was the Indian Railways
Passenger Reservation System built by the persistent efforts of CMC. In fact it
is the success of this digital project that affected 100s of millions of people
that led to acceptance of the new computer technology by ordinary people, trade
unions, politicians etc. Indian computer architects had designed the Param
super computer in CDAC and IT services industry was growing due to TCS, CMC and
later Infosys, WIPRO and HCL reaching an export of about $100 million. Large
steel mills had come into being in Durgapur, Rourkela, Bhilai and Bokaro from
the initial start in Tata Steel in Jamshedpur. The automobile industry had its
own base in two wheelers and had brought in the new Japanese models from Suzuki
at Maruti which were far superior to the
existing cars from Premier Automobiles (FIAT), Hindustan Motors.
Clearly the eighties had laid the ground work of
modernisation that led to the explosion after liberalisation in 1991.
However what was lacking was competition both global and
local and along with it global opportunities. It is this opening up in 1991
that accelerated the industry's growth beyond anybody's expectations.
Briefly we can identify five major features in the current
industrial scenario
1) Dynamism caused by global and local competition.
Protection from foreign competition and domestic licensing
regime which had led to monopolies which faced neither domestic nor foreign
competition had led many industries take a laid back attitude towards
innovation, quality, design, production efficiency and management skills.
Global and local competition energised many to change and become globally
competitive and even become multinationals. In an article "Prowling
Tigers" the magazine Economist reported that between 2006 and 2010 Indian
companies bought 754 companies abroad and invested 7500 crore dollars. TCS,
Infosys, HCL, Wipro, Tech-Mahindra etc earn over 90% of their revenue from
their operations abroad. Many groups like Tatas, Aditya Birla, Essar, Vedanta,
Videocon, Sun Pharma, Dr Reddy, JSW, ONGC, Reliance Industries etc earn sizable
revenue from operations abroad. It is also true that those who could not face
the challenges arising out of global and local competition went out of
business. Today there are many innovations in manufacturing and services by
Indian companies in IT, Financial markets, automobile, pharmaceuticals, petrochemicals
and industrial management, which have made a mark in global markets.
2) Access to global capital and markets and the emergence
of Indian multinationals
Many large business houses have had easy access to foreign
capital in the form of GDRs, ADRs, private equity and hedge funds, as well as
through Indian and foreign share listing, issuing bonds in other countries, loans
from foreign banks at lower interests etc. Many start ups have had access to
global venture capitalists. This has led to their growth in India as well as
abroad. For example Tata Group could not have bought Corus or Jaguar-Land Rover
or Tetley or many hotels abroad without such access to foreign capital. Kumar
Birla could not have bought Novelis one of the largest producers of Aluminum in
the world without such funding. Similarly almost all the IT companies bought by
TCS, Infosys, Wipro, HCL etc abroad are financed by foreign capital so also
other such acquisitions in the Pharma sector by Indian companies and so on. For
the last 15 years venture capital from US, Japan etc is funding many start ups
in India mainly in the IT sector.
Similarly with a change in the mindset due to globalisation
every entrepreneur has to design his enterprise from day one to be ready for
global competition and if successful to look for export markets.
3) Quality consciousness in manufacturing and services.
In the last 25 years thousands of Indian businesses have
improved their manufacturing and services processes so that a very large number
have the highest ratings in CMMI in IT and in other sectors have adopted ISO
standards, efficiency and quality improvement methods like Kaizen, Six Sigma,
Malcolm Baldridge, Total Preventive Maintenance, Total Quality Maintenance,
Quality Circles, Zero Defect Manufacture etc.
4) Smart Manufacturing
The received wisdom after Henry Ford's success in assembly
line manufacturing has been that if one has large scale and integrated
manufacturing under one roof then one achieves economies of scale. However
times have now changed and Japanese have innovated "Just in Time"
manufacturing and Distributed Manufacturing and German-American innovations in
IT enabled Enterprise Resource Planning have further revolutionised
manufacturing efficiencies. Indian companies post 90's have been quick to adopt
these and achieve high efficiencies both in large and medium volumes.
Today India may not have reached the manufacturing scales of
China but is technically ready for high growth in manufacturing, if not for
export markets which are in doldrums but for domestic consumers.
5) Frugal Engineering and solutions for the Bottom of the Pyramid
India is slowly becoming known for innovating low cost
designs in products and services which can serve over 5 billion of world's
population. Carlos Ghosn CEO of the French Renault Motors and Japanese Nissan
Motors has hailed it as Frugal Engineering and invested in India in a large
R&D effort. Tata's Nano, Swachh etc attracted global attention primarily
because of the low cost in Research and Development and a new design strategy
described by well known American management guru C K Prahlad as aiming at the
"Bottom of the income Pyramid"
This is a very brief look down the lane of where Indian
industry has reached in the last 25 years. A natural question would be why did
not industrial policy change towards liberalisation and globalisation earlier ?
The answers to that lie in post-independence Political Economy of India and
need another segment even for a brief discussion.