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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, July 24, 2001 |
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The spectre of de-industrialisation
By Prem Shankar Jha
There is an old saying that when there are two economists, there
are three views. India has lived in this debaters' limbo for half
a century while a surfeit of economists debated the ideological
pros and cons of each and every policy and action even as the
economy recorded one of the slowest growth rates in the world.
But the time when a comfortable middle class could indulge itself
in the luxury of endless ideological debate finally expired on
April 1 this year. For on that date what was previously a
negative threat - a failure to create enough jobs, turned into
the positive threat of de-industrialisation.
The economy's failure to create jobs has been obvious for a
decade. While the average annual growth of job seekers has risen
from 2.3 per cent in the 1970s and the 1980s to 2.5 per cent, the
average growth of employment in the organised sector has fallen
from 2.1 per cent to 0.8 per cent in the 1990s. But this average
is deceiving. While employment grew by 1.1 per cent per annum
between 1993 and 1997, with the return of the Hindu rate of
growth in 1997, its growth fell to 0.46 per cent in 1998, to 0.04
per cent in 1999, to minus 0.15 per cent in 2000. The average
annual growth in these years was, thus, a paltry 0.11 per cent.
In other words, one in 24 young job seekers is getting a job in
the organised sector in the four year period. A 2.5 per cent rate
of growth of job seekers in the sector means that 6.72 lakh
people tried to get these jobs every year, but only 17,000
succeeded. In the last three years, therefore, India added almost
exactly two million young people to the educated unemployed.
Worse to come
But what has happened so far could be a pallid foretaste of what
is to come. The slowdown in the creation of jobs so far has taken
place within a protected economy. Since April 1, when the last
remaining quantitative restrictions on 714 imported products were
lifted, India is no longer a protected economy. And every single
indicator is pointing towards a sharp acceleration of the loss of
jobs in the near future.
In the previous column, I had cited episodic evidence of the loss
of jobs on account of trade liberalisation. Among the cases cited
were that of Ajanta Clocks and Apollo Tyres. But evidence is
accumulating steadily that this shift of procurement by marketing
houses from Indian to East Asian sources is a far more general
phenomenon. A survey by a financial daily showed that almost
thousand Indian firms have been forced by the slump in domestic
demand, the squeeze on profits, the high cost of investment and
poor infrastructure in India to invest their funds in
manufacturing ventures abroad. At least a hundred have done so
specifically to produce goods more cheaply and of better quality
for the Indian market. Virtually the entire household electric
appliances industry has switched from buying from the Indian
small scale sector to buying from Asia.
This trend first revealed itself last year when the import of 47
consumer goods on thich QRs had been lifted in April 2000 jumped
by 40 per cent. This was during a year when imports, other than
oil, gold and silver, declined by almost 3 per cent. The trend
strengthened in April this year, the first month of full import
liberalisation. While total imports continued to shrink the
increase of 'other' imports, a once-residual category that
contains all consumer goods bought on private account, is a
phenomenal 332 per cent in a single month alone!
The clinching evidence has come from a consumer survey carried
out in May by a leading international securities firm. Its
researchers spoke with six importers in western India and found
to their own surprise that the scope for imports was huge and
"was going to create severe problems for the FMCG (fast moving
consumer goods) companies in India. Unlike the past, when
importers were no more than smugglers - small operators who
ordered one or two containers and sold the goods in key smuggled
goods markets - there was now an organised set of importers who
were tying up directly with international companies and setting
up their own distribution networks. Most were trying to become
exclusive importers for one company. More importantly, they were
importing goods openly with an MRP (minimum retail price) tag and
not trying to underinvoice their products.
Penetration of smaller towns
The survey found that, contrary to general belief, imports were
penetrating not only the elite shops in the main metros, but the
smaller towns as well. The six importers who were interviewed had
already established a presence in six or seven States. They
reported that sales were exceptionally good in the smaller towns
because of the greater novelty of imported goods. In Mumbai, one
exporter reported that his goods were being sold in no fewer than
6,000 shops.
Another disturbing development was that retailers were giving
these imports prime shelf space because the retail profit margins
on them were higher than on domestically produced goods (15 to 20
per cent against the industry average of 8 to 10 per cent). The
fastest moving items, the survey found, were coffee, soaps,
toiletries, and various food products.
According to the six respondents in the survey, Indian
manufacturers had made it exceptionally easy for imports to
penetrate the domestic market by grossly overpricing their
products. This had made it possible for them to fix prices on a
par with their Indian competitors and then offer much larger
wholesale and retail margins to their distributors. Many of the
most seriously affected products such as coffee and toiletries
are produced by not the small scale sector but large firms such
as Nestle and Hindustan Lever which have grown used to fleecing
Indian consumers in a closed market. So no tears need be shed
over them. But import penetration will not remain confined to
these products and very soon will start hitting the core of the
small scale sector.
This poses a deadly danger to them that has no parallel in the
mature industrialised countries. Three decades ago, the
reservation of no fewer than 800 products for this sector in a
misguided effort to create employment, separated the manufacture
of most consumer goods from their marketing. The so-called
manufacturers, whose brands we are familiar with, are, therefore,
only traders who procure their goods from the small-scale sector
and put their logos on them. As a result, they do not have the
incentive of genuine manufacturers to fight competition by
remodelling their products, lowering their prices or improving
their reliability, that a genuine manufacturer has. The actual
manufacturers, on the other hand, are fighting competition blind.
Lacking direct knowledge of the market, they do not know how to
respond to the loss of orders. They therefore stand to lose not
only most of their market, but also their marketing agencies.
This is something many of them will not be able to withstand.
Impact on jobs
The impact on employment could be frightful. In 1998-99, the
small scale industrial sector employed 17.16 million workers
directly, produced goods worth Rs. 527,510 crores, and exported
roughly a tenth of its output (which accounted for 35 per cent of
India's total exports). This suggests that at most one in ten
jobs - those in the export sector - remains secure. The fate of
the rest will depend on the degree of export penetration that
occurs in the consumer goods market. And that will depend on
whether private consumption recovers from its present slump and
starts growing again and on the extent of protection these
industries are able to get legitimately through permissible
tariffs and a devaluation of the exchange rate.
No one knows, therefore, how many of the 15 million remaining
jobs are at risk today. The number could be high if the
Government continues to play ostrich. It can come down
substantially if the Government can spark an economic recovery,
and indigenous producers receive timely infusions of technology
and capital to expand and modernise their output. But the
prospect of as many as three to five million jobs being lost or
foregone ( through stagnation of this sector) remains real.
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