India isn’t prepared at this point for outside Organizations that need to stop China

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At the point when the worldwide economy resumes work in the post-pandemic world, rising India’s financial development story is required to return. The International Monetary Fund appraises India’s Gross Domestic Product — GDP — to develop at 1.9 percent for the financial year finishing 31 March 2021 — making it the main other significant economy close by China assessed to develop — and has modified GDP development for the following monetary year at 7.4 percent.

Good faith encompassing India’s development has essentially fixated on the local affinity to expend, accessibility of minimal effort and ample work, the sharp decrease of worldwide oil costs, and the desire for outside capital moving to developing business sector economies once worldwide full scale monetary pointers balance out.

India’s growth is also likely to be supported by the flight of capital from China.

Despite promising indicators, India’s ability to attract foreign direct investment (FDI) should not be taken for granted — particularly by policymakers in New Delhi.

Investment in India

Global companies that once thrived on the efficiency and low costs of Chinese production have begun seeking supply-side diversification and resilience. This trend was set in motion by the tariff war between China and America, and is likely to accelerate in the aftermath of Covid-19. As per the US-India Strategic and Partnership Forum, 200 American corporations had already sought to move their manufacturing bases from China to India in mid-2019. More recently, reports from South Korea and Japan suggest that their firms have also evinced interest in migrating towards production-conducive economies like India, Vietnam and Thailand. Wistron, a Taiwan-headquartered manufacturing partner for Apple, has set aside one billion dollar for expansion in India, Vietnam, and Mexico to address supply chain risks emanating from China. Further, India’s large domestic base of consumers is a potent differentiator compared to other regional competitors, who are primarily export-oriented in their production.

At the moment, all of India’s attention — rightly so — has been focused on lowering interest rates through adjustments in monetary and fiscal policy. However, in the long-run, India will need more in terms of legislative reform if it is to come good on its promise as the “world’s fastest growing large economy”. To understand one of the key issues foreign businesses face in India, it is instructive to begin by comparing Tesla’s Shanghai Gigafactory setup to an automotive plant set up in Hansalpur, Gujarat by Suzuki Motors. Their timelines are as follows:

Tesla Gigafactory 3
Tesla Gigafactory 3
Suzuki Motors
Suzuki Motors

A mere 537 days separate the agreement with the Shanghai government and Tesla’s first car delivery to customers. Tesla’s capital expenditure was also reportedly 65 per cent lesser per unit of manufacturing capacity compared to the Model 3 production system in the USA. On the other hand, Maruti Suzuki India Limited’s (MSIL) facility took nearly five years from agreement to production and was constrained by multiple externalities. The facility was also on a smaller land parcel and constructed at a location that was not MSIL’s first choice. Although some portion of the five-year period may be linked to internal constraints, challenges like speculative increase in land prices and local agitations remain primary culprits. Moreover, MSIL’s setup was in Gujarat, which is among the top three industrialised states in India. Lower ranking Indian states in the industrial index — where the bulk of the low-cost labour resides — maybe even further away from what are acceptable timelines for establishing manufacturing units.

The land promise

For India to deliver on its promise, reform on land laws is vital. Access to technical expertise and financial capital is more easily available to foreign investors. However, the stringency of land laws has, so far, prevented the proliferation of commercial activity in the manufacturing sector, and dampened foreign investor sentiment. The current legislative framework for land acquisitions in India is detailed under the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement (LARR) Act, 2013.

The act increased the compensation given to landowners, provided rehabilitation and resettlement services, mandated a Social Impact Assessment (SIA) for public infrastructure projects, and provisioned a consent clause for projects under the private and public-private partnership (PPP) route. While the general intent to bring such a law was understandable, it spectacularly failed to balance the interests of landowners with India’s development needs. As former RBI governor Duvvuri Subbarao highlights, “investors have [since] been frustrated by India’s excruciatingly cumbersome land acquisition laws that result in heavy cost and time overruns.”

The Narendra Modi government attempted to pass an amendment to the principal Act in 2015. The said amendment sought to exempt five categories of projects — (i) defence, (ii) rural infrastructure, (iii) affordable housing, (iv) industrial corridors, and (v) infrastructure including PPPs where government owns the land — from the restrictions imposed by the LARR Act, 2013. This was proposed in order to reduce the minimum time required to complete the land acquisition process from 50 months to 42 months. The bill was passed in the BJP-majority Lok Sabha, but its progress was halted by a unified opposition in the Rajya Sabha. Opposition parties flagged definitional ambiguities and the dilution of statutory protections for landowners (who are mainly farmers in India).

Land being a state subject in India, six states have enacted legislations “exempting or enabling exemption of land acquisition from consent and social impact assessment requirements,” under the LARR Act, 2013. The wider issue of balancing corporate and farmer interests through a national framework for land laws remains. It warrants examination how an electorally conscious government pursues this reform agenda, particularly since it is not realistic to expect any changes in the land acquisition laws related to a downward revision of the scale of compensation or rehabilitation and resettlement. We provide some general suggestions.

Ways to bring land reforms

First, land acquisition for manufacturing firms should be integrated with local development. LARR Act 2013 increased the compensation for land acquisition from 1.3 times the price of land to twice the price of land in urban areas, and from twice to four times the price of land in rural areas. India already meets global compensatory standards. However, since agricultural land is the primary source of sustenance for most small landowners, the task of rehabilitation cannot be successfully achieved until an alternative mode of employment is provided.

Therefore, for a minimum period of ten years, there should be a 50 per cent reservation for locals in semi-skilled manufacturing jobs, and a ten per cent reservation in skilled or executive positions in all manufacturing firms set up under the land acquisition process. Also, the government should ensure that the transition from agricultural to manufacturing sector for the labour force is eased by setting up on-site vocational training centres in consultation with the manufacturing firms. This will reduce the dependence on the agricultural sector for employment and offer meaningful efficiencies by enhancing availability of skilled and semi-skilled labour to foreign manufacturing companies.

Second, the government must streamline its existing land holdings, and provide incentives for private land banks and public trusts to help set-up manufacturing units with foreign firms. The government of India — across various ministries and sub-divisions at the national, state and district levels — is arguably the largest landowner in India. If the Indian government is able to identify non-productive land under its ownership (including wasteland areas suitable for manufacturing) these could be simpler solutions to the problem of land acquisition for creating public infrastructure.

Additionally, public trusts and private entities in India, who have large portions of unutilised land banks, through tax breaks, long term leases, or land-equity deals, could also be incentivised into the process of facilitating the setting up of foreign manufacturing facilities. This would require each state to update and computerise its land records since most of them still do not have comprehensive accounts of non-agricultural holdings and continue to use Colonial era Land Revenue Codes. The rather expansive definition of “forest” provided in the T.N. Godavarman Thirumulkpad vs Union Of India case in 1996 — which includes areas neither reserved forest nor notified or protected forest – also needs to be revised through periodic land revision surveys.

Third, separate land acquisition tribunals should be set up to expedite legal cases pertaining to land acquisition. Importantly, if the tribunal decides to pass a stay order on any matter, there should a stipulation for consecutive-day hearings and a definite time period within which the case must be disposed of. This would help avoid the potentially significant legal expenditure and time delays endured by foreign manufacturing firms in the course of setting up base in India.

Fourth, the Indian government can introduce temporal and spatial exceptions to the Land Acquisition Act, 2013. First, the temporal exception may be achieved through the ordinance route that the Modi government has previously deployed. For instance, the government could announce a time bound (six month) relaxation of consent and SIA requirements under the 2013 Act for those companies looking to shift their manufacturing units from China to India. Second, for spatial exceptions, the government could introduce similar relaxations in select social economic zones (SEZ) or industrial corridors for these companies.

Fifth, instead of concentrating power under nodal agencies, the government needs to aim at greater e-governance facilities. Discretionary powers in the hands of government functionaries needs to be reduced and the entire process — from getting clearance to purchase land, registering property, getting electricity and water connections, getting environmental clearance, obtaining permission to set up a factory and clearance from pollution control board — should be carried out through a single window digital process. The grounds of rejecting applications should also be clearly spelt out, and the time for acceptance/redressal must also be stipulated. The Modi government has recently announced its intention to use a geographic information system (GIS) based platform to create a digital network of land banks at the national level —akin to the “Gujarat Land Bank Portal” set-up in Jan 2020 — to assist foreign investors in a transparent and competitive digital search for land parcels. It has also proposed an “investment clearance cell” to move all statutory clearance requirements to a single-window platform.

The Indian government’s fascination with the “Ease of Doing Business” rankings has not served it well. While landmark policy reforms between 2014-19 have manifested in a 79-position jump in India’s rankings to 63rd place, these are not fully representative of several on-ground challenges faced by businesses. In fact, Vietnam, which ranked 70th has been more successful in attracting foreign investment.

Incidentally, Vietnam’s performance was the weakest in ‘Resolving insolvency’, a parameter India has extensively addressed via the Bankruptcy Code. India’s strong commitment to democracy and the freedom of information makes it a strong competitor to attract foreign capital in a post-Covid-19 world, and participate more purposefully in the global supply chain. However, the government will have to tackle key issues such as reforms in land laws before these promises can be realised.

The Indian Telegraphhttps://theindiantelegraph.com.au/
Established in 2007, The Indian Telegraph is a multi award winning digital media company based in Australia.

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