In India, the public and the private sector have
coexisted in industrial activity, with the former dominant in certain
sectors. The present trend is clearly toward a larger role for the
private sector, with fresh public investments being more or less
restricted to a few strategic and essential infrastructure areas. The
government is also pursuing a policy of divestment of equity in
public-sector enterprises outside these areas and dilution of its
holding through fresh issues to the public, although privatization (in
the sense of transfer of majority or complete ownership) is not yet a
clearly stated policy.
The majority of big businesses continue to be
controlled by state-owned corporations, large family groups and
multinationals. However, this dominance has started to dilute with the
entry of nonresident Indian technocrats and successful
first-generation entrepreneurs.
In many substantial private-sector companies,
promoters hold a minority stake but are able to retain control due to
dispersal of balance holdings. The public financial institutions hold
large chunks of equity in many major Indian private sector companies,
but generally follow a policy of noninterference.
India also has a significant base of closely held
small and medium-size businesses supplying local and regional markets
in competition with the national large-scale manufacturers.
Economic development plans
In general terms, the government's aim, over four
decades of economic planning though successive five-year plans, has
been to raise the standard of living of the people through programs
also designed to promote equality and social justice.
In the Eighth Plan (1992-97) there is a
significant shift from detailed planing to indicative planning, with
private-sector investment assuming much greater importance. Recent
government pronouncements acknowledge that poverty cannot be removed
unless the creation of wealth is restored to its proper place in the
development process and that protection must be reduced because the
country cannot continue to be insulated from the global economy.
The policies announced since 1991 show a greater
reliance on market mechanisms than on physical and quantitative
restrictions and bureaucratic controls. This change is underscored by
a substantial reduction in areas reserved for the state and those
requiring licensing; provision for automatic clearance of direct
foreign investment and foreign-technology collaboration in specified
industries (see Chapter 4); and elimination of the requirement for
large businesses to obtain prior government approval for establishment
of new undertaking, expansion, mergers, and takeover. Imports of a
number of items have been decanalized, and import restrictions have
been virtually removed except for a short negative list of banned,
canalized or licensed items. (Canalized items are those imported and
distributed through designated public-sector agencies.)
Because difficult economic circumstances
necessitated the gradual reduction of high import duties and other
taxes, the peak tariff rate is currently 50 percent, compared with 150
percent in 1991. The government has also introduced convertibility for
the rupee on the current account and market-determined exchange rates.
State-owned financial institutions and
nationalized banks have begun to raise additional capital from the
public. Several private-sector banks and mutual funds have commenced
operations, and a number of foreign tie-ups have taken place in the
financial services sector. A number of multinationals are setting up
projects in diverse sectors
The policies also allow for areas that continue
to be reserved for the public sector to be opened up selectively to
private enterprise. Additionally, there is a special program to
attract substantial foreign investment that would provide access to
high technology and world markets. Investment proposals are considered
as a whole without predetermined parameters or procedures.
Investment trends
For a number of years prior to 1980, there was
considerable emphasis on the public sector, greater control over the
activities and expansion of "large" businesses, and pressure
on multinationals to "Indianize" in varying degree's. The
1980s saw dilution of public-sector dominance, and private investment
was allowed in core industries such as power, steel, petrochemicals,
and telecommunications equipment. The 1991 Industrial Policy made a
substantial reduction in the areas reserved to the public sector, and
the portfolio of public-sector investments is being reviewed with a
view to focusing the public sector on strategic, high-technology and
essential infrastructure areas. Generally, no fresh government
investment is contemplated outside these areas, and future
nationalization has been rules out. While there is as yet no clear
policy of privatization (in the sense of transfer of majority or
complete ownership), the government is pursuing a policy of offloading
a part of its shareholding in public-sector enterprises to mutual
funds, financial institutions, workers, and the general public.
Various measures are being taken for improving
infrastructure, by encouraging the creation of additional capacity and
provision of new services by private enterprise and foreign investors
as well as the better performance of existing units, particularly in
the areas of power, telecommunication and transportation.
Regional / special industry development
The government had been pursuing a national
policy of dispersing economic growth to the rural and less -
development urban areas where more employment opportunities and
increased incomes are needed. Recent changes have included a
realization in this policy. While some incentives for investments in
these areas continue to be available, government policy has shifted to
encouraging development of identified growth centers by focusing
public investment in the development of infrastructure at these
centers. Consequently, the government seeks to achieve balanced
regional development through removal of constraints to such
development; licensing is no longer used as an instrument for
influencing location.
A package of incentives is available to all
potential investors for investment in certain priority sectors of the
economy. In general, this covers industries that support agriculture,
industrial development, infrastructure, employment generation, and
foreign exchange earnings.
Free-trade zones
Seven export-processing zones provide facilities
for duty-free imports for the manufacture of export item under certain
conditions. Also, 100 percent export-oriented units (EOUs) can be set
up outside these zones. While these units are set up to cater to the
export market, they may be allowed to sell up to 25 percent of their
production in the domestic tariff area.
The government is also setting up a number of
Soft ware Technology Parks (STPs) for export of computer software
through shared date-communication facilities. Seven of them are now
operational. It is also possible to get a private facility recognized
as an STP, making it eligible for benefits similar to those granted to
operations in government-established parks, including domestic sales
of up to 25 percent of the value of software production. In addition,
the government has a scheme for the setting up of Electronic Hardware
Technology Parks (EHTPs), which would offer manufacturers the same
kind of benefits. The permitted level of domestic sales for EHTPs may
be as high as 30 percent of production for finished equipment and 40
percent for components.
All units under these various schemes are
required to adhere to prescribed value-added norms. India has no
free-trade zones that allow imports for reexport purposes without
processing.
Financial service services.
Financial services for commerce and industry are
provided by both private-sector institutions. The former consist of
nationalized and other scheduled banks (i.e., those registered with
the Reserve Bank of India), specialized financial institutions and
insurance corporations. Private providers of financial services
comprise smaller financial service agencies and banks and branches of
international banking corporations. Significant developments have
taken place in the area of financial services, with expansion and
specialization in services offered both by scheduled banks and by
smaller financial services agencies. The capital markets have also
been gaining in depth and volume of capitalization.
Public / private sector cooperation
Cooperation between the public and private
sectors takes place at many levels. Private-sector leaders have
traditionally served on planning bodies and boards of public-sector
corporations; Similarly, government and private-sector leaders share
many other platforms and forums, e.g., chambers of commerce and
industry associations, and they have worked together to attract
foreign direct investment. The last few decades have also seen the
promotion of numerous joint projects in which the government and
private-sector promoters have nearly equal equity stakes. Many such
ventures have also included participation by foreign corporations.
Labor / management relations
The Indian workforce, skilled or unskilled, is on
the whole respectful of authority and has good relations with
management. However, all large enterprises have one or more labor
unions, often with political affiliations. Labor legislation helps to
avoid many disputes but can also make discharge and retrenchment
difficult. Union membership is voluntary. Negotiation of wages and
employment conditions between management and union is an accepted
practice, and such negotiations usually result in collective
agreements, which when registered with the government are valid and
legally enforceable for the agreement period (usually three years).
Membership in trade blocs
Although not a member of any trade bloc, India
has entered into bilateral trade agreements with a number of countries
and is a member of several international organizations, such as the
United Nations, the Commonwealth, UNCTAD, and the WTO.
India is a member of one global preferential
trading arrangement, the Global System of Trade Preferences (GSTP),
which is open to the members of the G-77, and one regional
preferential trading arrangement, popularly known as the Bangkok
Agreement. The latter is open to all developing countries under the
aegis of United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and
the Pacific (ESCAP).
Exports
Government export policy is oriented toward
encouraging exports in traditional as well as nontraditional fields.
Measures taken for encouraging exports, particularly in agriculture
and allied fields and in the services sector, are yielding results.
For a discussion of export incentives.
Trade barriers
Local industry has traditionally enjoyed a high
level of protection through licensing and tariff barriers, with the
objectives of protection for domestic industry and the need to raise
revenues. Generally, permission to import was given to items
considered essential or materials necessary for the manufacture of
export goods. This restrictive treatment has undergone significant
change in accordance with the government's declared policy of reducing
protection to make domestic industry internationally competitive. Most
items, except consumer goods, are freely importable, and the peak
import tariff now stands at 50 percent, compared with 150 percent in
1991.